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FACT CHECK: Coney Reyes NOT endorsing milk product claiming to treat Alzheimer’s

WHAT WAS CLAIMED

Actress Coney Reyes is endorsing a milk product that helped her recover from Alzheimer’s disease.

OUR VERDICT

Fake:

Coney Reyes has not shared that she was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease, nor has she issued any official endorsement of the product. Mind-Max, the milk supplement advertised, is not FDA-approved.

By VERA Files

Jul 8, 2025

2-minute read
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An impostor Facebook page claims that veteran actress Coney Reyes is endorsing a milk supplement that allegedly helped her recover from Alzheimer’s disease. This is fake.

Uploaded on June 24, the post featured a lengthy narrative supposedly from the actress describing how she struggled with symptoms of early stage Alzheimer’s. It further claimed that her condition improved after using a “brain-supporting” milk called Mind-Max, purportedly developed by the Department of Health and neurologists from the United States.

Part of the caption read:

“GOOD NEWS for anyone struggling with early Alzheimer’s symptoms — like I did.

Within three weeks, I felt a change. My memory improved. I could speak more clearly. I prepared my Bible lessons with more confidence. I slept more peacefully, and most of all—I felt like myself again.”

Actress Coney Reyes is not endorsing the milk product Mind-Max that allegedly helped her recover from Alzheimer’s disease. There are no credible reports that she was ever diagnosed with such a condition. The product is not registered with the Food and Drug Administration.

Coney Reyes has not shared any personal story of being diagnosed with a memory-related condition, and no credible reports indicate she has experienced one.

She only portrayed last year a character with Alzheimer’s in the television series Shining Inheritance, where she played a grandmother struggling with the disease.

The website linked in the post directs to a page selling the milk product Mind-Max, which claims to support healthy vision, memory and focus. However, the supplement does not appear on the Food and Drug Administration’s list of registered food and drug products, which means its safety and quality are not guaranteed.

The page is impersonating Coney Reyes to make the advertisement appear legitimate.

Several health products have featured fabricated celebrity testimonials to bolster consumer trust. VERA Files previously debunked a similar claim involving a fake narrative attributed to Reyes (READ: Coney Reyes did NOT endorse stroke treatment).

The fake ad, posted by Facebook user Coney Reyes (created June 15, 2025), has so far garnered 1,500 reactions, 120 comments and 105 shares.

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