- By Shivangi Sharma
- Mon, 29 Sep 2025 05:55 PM (IST)
- Source:JND
US President Donald Trump sparked a social media frenzy on Saturday when he posted an AI-generated video promoting the so-called “MedBed” conspiracy. The video, styled like a Fox News segment, featured an AI-generated Lara Trump, his daughter-in-law, announcing the launch of “MedBed hospitals” and a “national MedBed card” system for every American. The video promised that these facilities would provide “guaranteed access” to top medical experts and restore “every citizen to full health and strength.” Trump deleted the post roughly twelve hours later.
What Is a MedBed?
The MedBed concept stems from fringe conspiracy theories suggesting that secretive machines exist that can cure all diseases, reverse aging, and even regrow lost limbs. Proponents claim these devices are either controlled by a deep state, billionaires, or clandestine government agencies. Some even argue that figures such as John F. Kennedy remain alive and youthful thanks to MedBeds. QAnon influencers like Michael Protzman, Romana Didulo, and YamatoQ have played a key role in spreading these beliefs.
The President of the United States is actively contributing to chaos and confusion here, by posting an AI video on medbeds, a science fiction medical thing that doesn't exist, but he claims it's real.
— BrooklynDad_Defiant!☮️ (@mmpadellan) September 28, 2025
Imagine if Joe Biden did this. pic.twitter.com/9TTvy2CD9j
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What Are MedBed Conspiracies About?
MedBed conspiracy theorists claim the devices use advanced technologies:
- Ions
- Terahertz light waves
- Artificial intelligence (AI)
- Quantum energy
Some believers even suggest the devices have alien origins.
Conspiracy theorists argue that Big Pharma and global elites suppress these machines to maintain profits.
- Commercial products inspired by MedBed claims:
- IonicCare: Claims to reduce stress and improve overall health within minutes.
- Tesla BioHealing: Sold machines priced up to $11,000 (Rs 9.17 lakh), marketed for wellness benefits, not for curing diseases.
In 2023, the US Food and Drug Administration warned Tesla BioHealing for failing to substantiate its medical claims. The company has since updated its website, clarifying that the devices are intended to support “optimum health and wellness” rather than treat diseases.
Trump’s AI Video And Political Fallout
In the AI segment, Lara Trump said, “Breaking. Now, President Donald J. Trump has announced a historic new healthcare system,” with Trump himself promising universal MedBed access. The video further claimed that only a limited number of MedBed cards would initially be available. The post drew immediate criticism, with California Governor Gavin Newsom mocking Trump’s claims: “Donald Trump has lost it…posting AI-generated slop about ‘miracle hospital beds’ that cure all illnesses.”