That headline has two classic red flags:
- “Changing lives” (vague, dramatic promise)
- “Doctors prefer not to mention it” (conspiracy-style marketing)
What’s actually true about garlic and oregano?
🧄 Garlic
Garlic contains compounds such as allicin that have been studied for:
- Mild blood pressure reduction
- Possible small improvements in cholesterol levels
- Antimicrobial properties
However:
- Effects are generally modest
- It is not a substitute for prescribed treatment for heart disease, high cholesterol, or infections
🌿 Oregano
Oregano contains antioxidants and compounds such as carvacrol.
Research suggests it may have:
- Antimicrobial activity in laboratory studies
- Antioxidant properties
But eating oregano is not a proven treatment for chronic diseases.
The “recipe in the first comment” problem
These posts often lead to mixtures like:
- Garlic + oregano tea
- Garlic + olive oil
- Garlic + honey
- Oregano oil concoctions
The recipe may be perfectly edible, but the health claims are usually inflated far beyond the evidence.
Why doctors “don’t mention it”
Usually because:
The evidence isn’t strong enough to recommend it as a treatment.
It’s not that doctors are hiding garlic or oregano. In fact, both are widely known and commonly discussed
