Be very careful with claims like this.
If an “oncologist announced that a drink kills cancer cells and treats gastritis, diabetes, and liver disease,” that is almost certainly misleading or exaggerated.
There is no single drink proven to:
- Kill cancer cells in the human body
- Cure gastritis
- Reverse diabetes
- Heal liver disease
Those are very different conditions with different causes.
Why These Claims Spread
Often, these claims come from:
- Lab studies done on cancer cells in a petri dish (not in humans)
- Animal studies
- Misquoted doctors
- Social media exaggeration
Something killing cancer cells in a laboratory does not mean it cures cancer in people.
Drinks Often Promoted in These Claims
Common examples include:
- Turmeric drinks
- Lemon water
- Baking soda mixtures
- Aloe vera juice
- Herbal teas
- Soursop (graviola) juice
Some of these may have anti-inflammatory or antioxidant properties, but none are proven cancer cures.
The Medical Reality
Cancer treatment requires:
- Surgery
- Chemotherapy
- Radiation
- Immunotherapy
- Targeted therapy
Gastritis may require:
- Acid reducers
- Antibiotics (for H. pylori)
Diabetes requires:
- Blood sugar management
- Medication or insulin
Liver disease treatment depends on the cause.
No drink replaces these.
⚠️ Serious Warning
Relying on “miracle drinks” can:
- Delay real treatment
- Allow disease to progress
- Cause harm (some herbal mixtures damage the liver)
What IS True
Some drinks can support overall health:
- Green tea (antioxidants)
- Unsweetened herbal teas
- Water (for liver and kidney health)
- Low-sugar diets for diabetes
But support ≠ cure.
If you tell me which specific drink you’re referring to, I can break down:
- What science actually says
- Whether it’s safe
- Whether there’s any real benefit
It’s always better to check than to trust viral headlines.