A deer placenta supplement is being hawked across social media as a COVID-19 cure. It isn't, and the people selling it know it.

Riway's Purtier is marketed by the company itself as an anti-aging product. But distributors operating on social media have gone rogue, making wild claims that the supplement boosts immune systems and prevents coronavirus infection. Some posts went up within the last 24 hours. All of them are false.

There are zero medical studies proving Purtier has any medical benefit. No regulatory body in any country has approved it to treat, manage, or cure anything. Yet the distributors keep pushing.

One recent ad claimed Purtier helps recovery after illness, improves brain and organ performance, overcomes menopausal disorders and Parkinson's disease, treats migraines and back pain, and helps with arthritis. Another tied the product directly to COVID-19 prevention. None of this is supported by evidence.

What's happening here is simple opportunism. Bad actors are exploiting the pandemic to move product. They're betting that fear will override skepticism, that desperate people will buy whatever promises relief.

The stakes couldn't be higher. People relying on deer placenta pills instead of real preventive measures—masks, distancing, vaccines—are putting themselves and others at genuine risk. A supplement marketed for wrinkles won't stop a virus that has killed millions.

Riway bears responsibility for this mess. The company has known for years that distributors make outrageous medical claims. Purtier's popularity in multilevel marketing networks practically guarantees aggressive promotion. Yet Riway has done nothing to stop it. As long as sales climb, the company looks away.

This isn't a gray area. When a business profits from a supply chain making false health claims during a pandemic, that's not just bad marketing—it's reckless.

By August 2021, Singapore's authorities had enough. Riway was prosecuted and convicted over misleading and false health claims related to Purtier. The legal system finally did what the company wouldn't: held someone accountable.

Distributors still pushing Purtier as a virus treatment need to stop. Full stop. You're not running a business. You're gambling with people's lives.


🤖 Quick Answer

What is Purtier and how is it being mismarketed?
Purtier is a deer placenta supplement marketed by Riway as an anti-aging product. However, distributors on social media have made unauthorized claims that it treats COVID-19, boosts immunity, and cures various diseases including Parkinson's and migraines, despite lacking medical evidence or regulatory approval for any therapeutic use.

What evidence supports Purtier's medical claims?
No medical studies demonstrate that Purtier provides any therapeutic benefit. No regulatory body worldwide has approved it to treat, manage, or cure any medical condition. The health claims made by distributors are unsupported by scientific evidence or regulatory authorization.

Why are these marketing practices considered fraudulent?
Distributors knowingly promote false health claims for an unapproved supplement, specifically claiming it prevents COVID-19 infection. This constitutes health fraud,


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