nostrum
noun·/ˈnɒs.trəm/
A supposed remedy, especially a quack medicine promoted as a cure-all. A solution sold with more certainty than evidence. Nostrum trades in promise: relief packaged as persuasion.
He offered a nostrum for every grief—sleep, money, love—each one conveniently available for a fee.
Etymology
From Latin nostrum “ours,” as in remedium nostrum “our remedy,” originally the proprietary mixture of a seller. The possessive became suspicious: what is “ours” is not necessarily true—only owned.
Related Words
panaceaa cure-all; sometimes sincere, often not
quackerythe practice that produces nostrums
elixira romanticized near-synonym, less inherently dubious
snake oilidiomatic modern equivalent