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Social media ad for "guaranteed weight loss" leads to a fake-doctor call centre that takes lakhs

A Facebook or Instagram ad promises effortless weight loss. A call centre poses as certified dietitians and a famous doctor, sends genuine-looking medicines to build trust, then upsells escalating health packages over months — one Surat victim paid ₹1.77 crore.

Also known as: fake weight loss medicine scam, fake doctor health package fraud, wellness call centre scam India, Curest Science fraud, fake dietitian WhatsApp scam

What to do right now

  1. 1 Stop all payments immediately — real weight loss requires no multi-lakh upfront treatment package
  2. 2 Verify any doctor's name at the Medical Council of India registry at https://www.mciindia.org before paying
  3. 3 Verify any food supplement company at the FSSAI portal (https://foscos.fssai.gov.in) before buying
  4. 4 Block the contact and report the WhatsApp account to WhatsApp as a scam
  5. 5 If you paid by UPI or bank transfer, call your bank immediately and file a complaint at https://cybercrime.gov.in or call 1930 (national cyber helpline).

Red flags

  • You found this service through a social media ad — not through a hospital, certified clinic, or registered dietitian
  • You are communicating only via WhatsApp or phone; the 'doctor' has never given you a registration number you can verify with the Medical Council of India
  • Prices escalate rapidly: initial package ₹3,000–10,000, then 'advanced treatment' packages worth lakhs
  • The company or doctor name cannot be verified on the FSSAI food product registry, MCI doctor database, or company registrar
  • Physical goods arrive — medicines, powders, supplements — to create the illusion the business is real, before major amounts are demanded
  • You are told only this programme can reverse your condition and you will regain weight or your disease will worsen if you stop mid-way

Sources

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