Hospital Denies Conducting Drug Test on Regina Daniels as Online “Medical Report” Sparks Controversy
Serenity Royale Hospital has publicly dismissed claims linking it to a viral medical report alleging that Nollywood actress Regina Daniels tested positive for multiple hard drugs.
The hospital issued a formal statement on Thursday evening, describing the trending document as entirely fabricated and urging the public to disregard it.
The drama began after Regina’s estranged husband, Senator Ned Nwoko, accused the actress of drug addiction, insisting she must undergo rehabilitation. His claims surfaced amid a messy breakup and accusations by Regina that the lawmaker had subjected her to domestic abuse.
Shortly after the accusation, a supposed “laboratory report” began circulating on social media, listing dangerously high levels of marijuana, cocaine, morphine, opiates, and alcohol in Regina’s system.
But the hospital has now distanced itself from the controversy.
In a statement signed by its management, Serenity Royale Hospital said:
“Our attention has been drawn to a post (on an alleged MID TERM HOME DETOX REPORT) being circulated online in the name of Serenity Royale Hospital with respect to Mrs Nwoko Regina.
We wish to state clearly that the publication and circulation of the said post did not emanate from us, and we respectfully request the public to disregard same.”
The statement makes it clear: the hospital neither conducted any drug test on Regina nor issued any report.
Opinion: A Dangerous Trend — When Private Battles Become Public Weapons
This incident exposes a troubling pattern in celebrity culture and Nigerian social media spaces—the weaponization of personal scandals.
Whether Regina Daniels is guilty of anything or not shouldn’t be the focus; what’s disturbing is how easily fake documents and unverified claims can ignite a nationwide firestorm.
A fabricated medical report doesn’t just tarnish a reputation—it undermines trust in real medical institutions and reduces serious issues like drug abuse and domestic violence to tools for online drama.
This saga also reflects how personal conflicts, especially among public figures, quickly escalate into public trials where accuracy becomes secondary to entertainment. Both Regina and Ned Nwoko are navigating a painful breakup, but the digital crowd has turned their private turmoil into a spectacle.
If anything, this situation is a reminder that fact-checking is no longer optional. In an age where a single screenshot can destroy careers, Nigerians must learn to pause, question, and verify before amplifying damaging claims.
At the heart of it all is a young actress and a family going through a crisis. Beyond the headlines and the noise, one hopes that truth, fairness, and healing—rather than sensationalism—prevail.




