About Pseudo-Treatments for the Prostate: Herbal Scams to Avoid
Content updated in 2025–2026.
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How Benign Prostatic Hyperplasia Should Not Be Treated
Question
The negative consequences of surgery for benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH) alarm many patients and drive them to search for alternatives. The consequences of complete prostate removal are even more concerning. I often see advertisements claiming to cure BPH in just a few days or weeks. How accurate are these promises? Is rapid treatment of BPH truly possible? Can herbal tea or other natural remedies effectively treat benign prostatic hyperplasia? Which herbs and dietary supplements are actually considered beneficial for prostate health, improvement of urinary function, and reduction of inflammation in the prostate? Are there reliable home remedies, herbal blends, or traditional treatments that can help alleviate BPH symptoms and support overall male reproductive health?
Answer
This story explains how swindlers operate and why so many men fall for deceptive claims. Even if you have never encountered such a situation, this information will help you recognize fraudulent schemes online. Promises of instant cures are placed by fraudsters to exploit patients’ fears. In reality, BPH, like other prostate conditions, cannot be cured quickly. Below, I will explain how these deceptions work and provide evidence about the true timeline for recovery, the effectiveness of natural remedies, and the realistic expectations for improvement of urinary symptoms and prostate function.
Psychology of Fraudsters
Any clever con artist, who has devised yet another scheme to illegally extract money, first analyzes all likely aspects of the venture. They are especially interested in what kind of advertising appeals a patient diagnosed with BPH is most likely to respond to, including those seeking information about home treatments, herbal remedies, anti-inflammatory herbs, or quick relief for urinary problems.
Swindlers aim first to grab the attention of men experiencing discomfort, urinary retention, frequent urination, or newly diagnosed with BPH, who may not yet fully understand their condition or the options for treatment, including lifestyle changes, prostate-friendly diets, and natural therapy.
How does a person with benign prostatic hyperplasia behave after ineffective visits to a urologist? Typically, they actively search for solutions, often turning to home remedies, herbal supplements, folk treatments, or natural teas in an attempt to relieve symptoms. Additional pain, nocturia, or urinary urgency can easily override logical thinking.
Manipulators use this insight to offer deceptive schemes. For an uninformed patient, the most effective bait might be phrases such as: “BPH cured in two weeks” or “prostate treatment in three days”, promotion of miracle supplements, or herbal extracts that supposedly restore prostate health, reduce inflammation, and normalize urination.
The main goal of charlatans is to sell a product marketed as a panacea for men with BPH and other prostate problems. They almost always follow general rules: first, sell the advertised product at the highest possible price; second, sell as many units as possible to a single buyer; and third, structure the transaction to avoid future liability and regulatory scrutiny.
Herbal “Miracle” Tea
Real-life examples are the most memorable, so I suggest you examine one version of deception. I did not search extensively on the Internet; I simply chose the first advertisement I came across that promised rapid treatment of benign prostatic hyperplasia. The website contained several dozen enthusiastic but fake reviews, offered equally fictitious feedback, a free consultation with a specialist, and most importantly—a “miraculous” herbal blend, which, of course, was sold for a fee. The name is somewhat enchanting to an uninformed person—“miracle tea,” and a carefully chosen name is a well-planned marketing tactic and a key to success. All that was required was to provide a phone number, which I did immediately.
Within a few minutes, I received a call. I answered. The conversation was led by a female voice claiming to represent a large research center, naturally unknown to anyone. From the first minutes of contact, I clearly recognized the incompetence of the speaker, but I pretended to be an interested patient, largely ignorant of medical knowledge. After a few brief questions, which seemed more like an inquiry into my financial status, the pseudo-expert began to say exactly what a person with a real problem, namely benign prostatic hyperplasia of the prostate, would want to hear.
For about ten minutes, the woman described the extraordinary healing properties of her herb, claiming that painful symptoms would disappear within a few days. She calmly stated the price for one package—one hundred and fifty dollars, as I had identified myself as an entrepreneur. Quite a lot for an unknown remedy. She tried to gain my trust quickly by offering individual delivery of the product directly into my hands. The company had its own couriers and did not trust postal services.
Most importantly, I was told that I was very lucky, as today only there was an unprecedented special offer. If I bought three packages of the tea, and according to the seller using three was much more beneficial, exactly what I needed, I would receive an extraordinary discount. The price for the three packages would be four hundred dollars instead of four hundred and fifty. I sharply changed the tone of the conversation, likely causing my interlocutor a brief pause. I said I would think about it and ended the call.
The next day, I contacted the same scammers in the same manner, presenting myself as a retired person. It worked. The new consultant, whom I recognized by her voice, adjusted her strategy. The price for a single package was now much lower—seventy dollars. The conversation followed the same pattern, and once again, the special offer lasted only one day. Three packages of the herbal tea, with the discount, were priced at one hundred and fifty dollars for a retiree. In short, in the first case, they tried to deceive me to the maximum, while in the second, they were more lenient.
During phone conversations, the seller creates the illusion of extraordinary demand for the product. This is achieved easily. At the start of the call, a pre-recorded audio track likely plays automatically, making the uninformed person believe that the call is coming from a room with at least a dozen operators. The recording reproduces human voices with specific monologues, some quieter, some louder, and almost continuous phone calls, simulating the energetic work of a large sales team. In reality, the situation is the exact opposite. This clever tactic immediately predisposes the most naive buyer to quickly close the deal without hesitation.
After each call, different caller numbers appeared on my mobile phone. A trusting person might think that further feedback would be possible, but that is not the case. Every attempt to establish follow-up contact was futile. With modern computer technology, this is easily accomplished. I want to warn trusting people: if you attempt to follow up, the communication will be one-time only and initiated solely by your potential seller.
If the sales offer is positively received, the next stage begins, which is delivery of the product directly into the buyer’s hands. This is carried out by the so-called courier. Again, an uninformed person feels encouraged and even pleased by this high-level service, but it is done solely to ensure that, in the event of complaints or legal action, the deceived party has no evidence proving the purchase. If the product were sent through an official postal service, you would receive a receipt confirming delivery, which could serve as proof in legal proceedings. A courier, however, either provides no documentation at all or issues a forged one.
Where there is supply, there will inevitably be demand. Eventually, someone does buy this herbal “miracle” tea. A patient attempting to improve their health in this way quickly realizes that their time has been wasted. The truth is that the product has nothing to do with actual treatment.
The analysis does not end here. I have always been interested in how search engines operate, and I clearly understand that, to find necessary information online, you must formulate your search queries correctly. After some effort, I analyzed the structure of the fraudulent website. It turned out that the herbal “miracle” tea, according to its creators, treats almost all serious diseases. Here is part of the list: stomach ulcer, chronic prostatitis, low blood pressure, high blood pressure, psoriasis, diabetes. But there is no page where this full list is actually published. If there were, users would immediately notice contradictions.
For example, a person with hypertension searching for relevant information would, upon entering the scammers’ website, see only a page about hypertension and nothing else. They would not be able to access the page about hypotension from the hypertension page without professional knowledge. This is how single-page websites and their numerous clones are created. The fraudsters achieve one of their main goals, which is to sell as many units of their product as possible, by broadening the list of diseases and thereby maximizing the perceived applicability of the product.
There is still more. I left the content I analyzed untouched. After a brief search, I found an article where a real professional herbalist categorically disproved the claimed origin of some herbs included in this tea, from regions he had studied thoroughly.
Finally, I found other websites where less ambitious adventurers offered the same useless “miracle” tea at a much lower, uniform price for all buyers.
How to Treat Benign Prostatic Hyperplasia
Benign prostatic hyperplasia is a serious diagnosis. It is not without reason that experienced specialists hold the opinion that benign prostatic hyperplasia of the prostate is almost unresponsive to modern drug therapy. There are hundreds, if not thousands, of folk remedies proposed. One hears of all sorts. The incredible variety of these remedies gives a rational person reason to seriously doubt their effectiveness.
Conclusions
I suggest that, if you wish, you keep in mind my conclusions, which are based on practical experience. First of all, if a disease has developed, analyze your past lifestyle. Try to identify the causes that provoked the development of benign prostatic hyperplasia. They certainly exist. I will list some of them: unhealthy and unbalanced nutrition, alcohol, smoking, excessive exposure to vibrations, physical inactivity, excessive physical strain, the presence of other illnesses, and various other factors. Eliminate the triggers of benign prostatic hyperplasia of the prostate.
Next, it is important to understand that effective treatment is possible only through a reasonable intervention in the functioning of your endocrine system and a positive influence on heart and vascular function. Success cannot be achieved without physical activity, a rational diet, and certain other conditions. If you take all this into account and start the process, within a few months you will achieve a good and stable result, regardless of the stage of benign prostatic hyperplasia, provided your condition is not critical.
Respectfully, Gennadiy Plotyan, author of the website and the prostate treatment method.

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