Be careful with claims like that—especially when they say a single “drink” can treat multiple serious diseases such as gastritis, diabetes, and liver disease.
Key reality check
There is no scientifically proven drink that cures all three of these conditions:
- Gastritis is usually caused by infection (like H. pylori), NSAID painkillers, or acid irritation. It needs specific medical treatment.
- Type 2 Diabetes is a chronic metabolic condition managed with diet, exercise, and sometimes medication/insulin—not cured by any beverage.
- Liver disease includes many different conditions (fatty liver, hepatitis, cirrhosis), and treatment depends on the exact cause.
About the “oncologist said it” claim
Even if a real doctor is mentioned, that doesn’t automatically make the claim valid:
- Oncologists specialize in cancer, not general metabolic or digestive cures.
- Social media often misattributes medical endorsements to doctors.
- “Cures everything” type statements are a major red flag for misinformation or marketing hype.
Why these claims spread
- They often come from ads, herbal product marketing, or forwarded messages
- They use authority language (“doctor said…”) to sound trustworthy
- They rarely provide clinical evidence or published studies
Safe takeaway
A drink might:
- help hydration
- support digestion mildly (like ginger or herbal teas)
- complement a healthy diet
But it will not replace medical treatment for gastritis, diabetes, or liver disease.
If you want, tell me the name or ingredients of the drink—I can break down what it actually does and whether there’s any real evidence behind it.
