That kind of line is almost always clickbait or fear-based storytelling, not a reliable medical warning.
It’s designed to make you feel like a normal everyday habit is suddenly deadly, but real medicine doesn’t work that way. If there is a genuine risk being referenced, it’s usually being exaggerated or stripped of context.
To make this useful instead of scary, here’s the grounded way to think about it:
- People very rarely die “from one simple action” in their sleep.
- When sudden deaths happen at night, they’re usually linked to underlying conditions (heart disease, sleep apnea, arrhythmias, uncontrolled diabetes, etc.), not a single behavior.
- Viral posts often remove medical history and make it sound like “this one thing caused it.”
If you tell me what “this” refers to in the post (the activity or product), I can break down:
- whether there’s any real medical risk
- who actually needs to be careful
- and what is just internet exaggeration
Right now, the claim is too vague to evaluate, but the framing itself is a red flag for misinformation.