22/02/2026
READ | Misinformation Misleads Minds and Compromise Careโ A Statement on the Viral OGTT Claims
The recent misleading claims circulating online regarding the Oral Glucose Tolerance Test (OGTT) is a matter of serious concern. On February 20, 2026, a social media post claimed that the test was designed to cause pregnant women to fail due to fasting, glucose intake, and activity restrictions, indicating that these factors elevate blood sugar levels and lead to misleading diagnoses of gestational diabetes.
When this gold standard diagnostic test is declared as a โset up to make anyone failโ โ especially by people who hold online platformsโ the audience may be harmed by the lack of factual evidence. This not only places mistrust on medical doctors and procedures, it also creates an environment of fear, confusion, and hesitation which could be detrimental to the health of expecting mothers.
An Oral Glucose Tolerance test (OGTT) is a standardized, evidence-based diagnostic test for detecting gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM), which can develop due to pregnancy-related hormonal changes that cause insulin resistanceโeven in individuals with no prior diabetes history. This test is not made to โset us up to failโ rather to assess the body's ability to tolerate glucose ensuring that the mother is not at risk of GDM.
Through this, early identification of aberrant glucose metabolism is made possible allowing for prompt nutritional and medical interventions that safeguard maternal health and fetal development. Without this, it could lead to complications such as macrosomia, birth trauma, neonatal hypoglycemia, preeclampsia, and an elevated risk of future diabetes for both mother and child. As such, we should not foster a community where evidence-based medicine is portrayed as harmful or unnecessary. Reliable information through healthcare professionals, help desks, and prenatal check-ups serve an important role in guiding informed decision-making.
The Medical Technology Society firmly supports evidence-based laboratory testing and responsible health communication. We urge content creators to verify medical information not fueled with opinions about proven tests with qualified healthcare professionals. As future healthcare professionals, it is our responsibility to prevent misinformation and protect patients from misleading claims that may affect critical health decisions. Misinformation misleads minds and compromises critical health decisions, undermining the foundation of healthcare, to preserve, protect, and uphold life for every patient.