That kind of statement is not medically credible as written and should be treated as misinformation or at least heavy exaggeration.
No oncologist (a cancer specialist) can responsibly claim that a single drink “kills cancer cells” and also treats gastritis, diabetes, and liver disease all at once. Those are very different conditions with different causes and treatments.
Why this claim is not reliable
- Cancer treatment is complex: It requires evidence-based therapies like surgery, chemotherapy, radiation, immunotherapy, or targeted drugs—not a single beverage.
- “Kills cancer cells” in lab studies does not mean it works in the human body. Many substances kill cells in a petri dish but are not safe or effective in people.
- Diabetes, gastritis, and liver disease are chronic medical conditions that require medical management, not cure-all drinks.
- Legitimate medical breakthroughs are published in peer-reviewed journals, not announced in viral posts or vague “doctor said” headlines.
Common pattern behind such claims
These statements usually:
- Misquote or falsely attribute a “doctor” or “oncologist”
- Take early lab research out of context
- Promote a specific “miracle drink” (often lemon, ginger, turmeric, baking soda, etc.)
- Mix unrelated diseases to make it sound more powerful
What is actually true (important nuance)
Some foods and drinks may:
- Support general health
- Reduce inflammation slightly
- Help digestion (like ginger or peppermint tea)
But they do not cure cancer or replace medical treatment.
Bottom line
If a claim says one drink can treat multiple serious diseases like cancer + diabetes + liver disease, it is almost certainly not scientifically valid and should not be used in place of medical care.
If you want, paste the full post or tell me the “drink” they mentioned—I can break down exactly what’s true, what’s exaggerated, and what’s false about it.