What you’re describing is a common misinformation / scam pattern online, especially involving hydrogen peroxide misuse claims.
⚠️ The claim problem
Hydrogen peroxide
Hydrogen peroxide is a legitimate disinfectant when used correctly (for example on surfaces or in diluted medical-grade solutions). However, online scams often misuse it by:
- Claiming it can cure diseases internally or miraculously
- Redirecting users to “see comments” for secret instructions
- Leading people to unsafe dosing methods (ingestion, inhalation, etc.)
- Promoting fake health products or supplements
🚨 Why this is dangerous
Medical professionals do NOT recommend using hydrogen peroxide internally or in unregulated ways because it can:
- Irritate or burn tissues
- Damage the stomach and intestines
- Cause oxygen gas embolism (in severe cases)
- Lead to poisoning if ingested incorrectly
🎯 Common scam pattern you’re noticing
These posts usually follow a formula:
- Shocking health claim (“doctor won’t tell you this…”)
- Mention of hydrogen peroxide as a “secret remedy”
- “Check comments for method”
- Link to external site or product
- Monetization or phishing attempt
🧠 How to recognize misinformation like this
Red flags include:
- Claims of “cures everything”
- No medical source or clinical evidence
- Pressure to click links or “see comments”
- Advice that contradicts official health guidance
- Promotion of “hidden knowledge”
🛡️ Safe rule to follow
- Use hydrogen peroxide only for external disinfection as labeled
- Ignore health claims involving internal use
- Verify medical information from trusted health organizations
🧠 Simple takeaway
Posts promoting unsafe uses of hydrogen peroxide and pushing you to comments or links are usually misinformation or scams designed to sell unsafe products or generate clicks.
If you want, I can explain:
- safe medical uses of hydrogen peroxide
- or how to spot health misinformation on social media quickly