That kind of claim is a big red flag.
Anything said to eliminate high blood pressure, diabetes, blood fats (cholesterol/triglycerides), and insomnia all at once is almost always being exaggerated or misrepresented—especially when it’s framed as a “blessing” or miracle cure without naming a specific, evidence-based treatment.
A few grounded points:
- Conditions like hypertension and diabetes are chronic medical diseases. They can often be controlled very well, but not instantly “eliminated” by a single food, drink, herb, or practice.
- Lifestyle changes (diet, weight loss, exercise, sleep) can improve all of these together, which is probably where some of these claims come from—but that’s gradual and not magical.
- Some products online borrow scientific-sounding language to market themselves as cures, but real medical benefits require clinical evidence and regulation, not testimonials or religious framing.
If you tell me what “it” refers to (a plant, drink, supplement, or practice), I can break down what research actually says about it and whether any of the claims hold up.
