What’s true ✅
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Garlic contains allicin, a compound with antibacterial, antifungal, and antiviral activity.
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In lab studies, garlic extracts have shown activity against several types of bacteria and fungi, including some that cause foodborne illness or skin infections.
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Garlic has been used traditionally to support immune health.
What’s not accurate ❌
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There is no solid scientific evidence proving that garlic “eliminates exactly 14 types of bacteria and 13 types of infections.”
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Garlic does not cure infections on its own and should not replace medical treatment, especially for serious or persistent infections.
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Results seen in lab dishes don’t always work the same way in the human body.
The accurate way to say it
A safer, more truthful version would be:
“Garlic contains compounds with antimicrobial properties that can help inhibit the growth of some bacteria, fungi, and viruses, and may support immune health.”
How garlic is best used
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As part of a healthy diet
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For general immune support
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Not as a substitute for antibiotics or doctor-prescribed treatment
Important safety note
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Large amounts of raw garlic can irritate the stomach.
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Garlic can interact with some medications (like blood thinners).
Bottom line:
Garlic is a helpful supportive food with antimicrobial effects, but claims with exact numbers and “eliminates infections” wording are not scientifically reliable.
If you want, I can help you rewrite this as a factual health post, social media caption, or myth-vs-fact explanation—just tell me where you plan to use it.