Placebo effect: Difference between revisions

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The word [[placebo]] was first used in conjunction with medical treatments by [[William Cullen]] in the 18th century. Cullen, the leading physician of the day, used it to describe treatments that he gave with the intention of reassuring the patient rather than with any rational expectation that they might be effective through objective physiological mechanisms.
The word [[placebo]] was first used in conjunction with medical treatments by [[William Cullen]] in the 18th century. Cullen, the leading physician of the day, used it to describe treatments that he gave with the intention of reassuring the patient rather than with any rational expectation that they might be effective through objective physiological mechanisms.
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"The placebo effect is nothing new, nor are attempts to enhance its effect unconventional. In fact the history of conventional medicine has largely been the history of the placebo effect... Most medicines used by doctors up until the 20th Century are now known to be inert, but they were often of exotic origin and thus were often perceived as having magical properties. Even today part of the conventional doctor's armoury may include inert capsules and sugar pills. In fact one study showed that 80 per cent of US hospital clinicians admitted to the occasional use of placebo medicines in routine clinical practice....Many studies have been conducted where placebo treatments have been compared to no-treatment controls. Evidence from a wide range of studies indicates that placebo therapies in the context of conventional medicine can provide some relief from a huge range of conditions including allergies, angina, asthma, some forms of cancer, cerebral infarction, depression, diabetes, epilepsy, multiple sclerosis, ulcers and warts. Placebo responses have also been found to vary enormously —from 0 - 100 per cent — even for the same condition"
<ref>[http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/ld199900/ldselect/ldsctech/123/12305.htm House of Lords Select Committee on Science and Technology, Sixth Report] Chapter 3: Patient satisfaction, the role of the therapist and the placebo response</ref>
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However, for very many conditions, it is now clear that the placebo effect can be very powerful indeed. In 1955, researcher H.K. Beecher published "The Powerful Placebo," in which he concluded that, across 26 studies he analyzed, an average of 32 percent of patients responded to placebo.<ref>H.K. Beecher, cited by Tamar Nordenberg, "The Healing Power of Placebos", ''FDA Consumer Magazine", January-February 2000, [http://www.fda.gov/fdac/features/2000/100_heal.html ]</ref> In the 1960s, many studies showed physiological effects of dummy pills--they tended to speed up pulse rate, increase blood pressure, and improve reaction speeds, for example, when participants were told they had taken a stimulant, and had the opposite effects when participants were told they had taken a sedative.
However, for very many conditions, it is now clear that the placebo effect can be very powerful indeed. In 1955, researcher H.K. Beecher published "The Powerful Placebo," in which he concluded that, across 26 studies he analyzed, an average of 32 percent of patients responded to placebo.<ref>H.K. Beecher, cited by Tamar Nordenberg, "The Healing Power of Placebos", ''FDA Consumer Magazine", January-February 2000, [http://www.fda.gov/fdac/features/2000/100_heal.html ]</ref> In the 1960s, many studies showed physiological effects of dummy pills--they tended to speed up pulse rate, increase blood pressure, and improve reaction speeds, for example, when participants were told they had taken a stimulant, and had the opposite effects when participants were told they had taken a sedative.


In the first decade of the 21st century, there was an explosion of research into the placebo effect, as brain imaging technology made it possible to visualise, in human volunteers, the brain activity underlying the placebo effect.
In the first decade of the 21st century, there was an explosion of research into the placebo effect, as brain imaging technology made it possible to visualise, in human volunteers, the brain activity underlying the placebo effect.
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"The placebo effect is nothing new, nor are attempts to enhance its effect unconventional. In fact the history of conventional medicine has largely been the history of the placebo effect... Most medicines used by doctors up until the 20th Century are now known to be inert, but they were often of exotic origin and thus were often perceived as having magical properties. Even today part of the conventional doctor's armoury may include inert capsules and sugar pills. In fact one study showed that 80 per cent of US hospital clinicians admitted to the occasional use of placebo medicines in routine clinical practice....Many studies have been conducted where placebo treatments have been compared to no-treatment controls. Evidence from a wide range of studies indicates that placebo therapies in the context of conventional medicine can provide some relief from a huge range of conditions including allergies, angina, asthma, some forms of cancer, cerebral infarction, depression, diabetes, epilepsy, multiple sclerosis, ulcers and warts. Placebo responses have also been found to vary enormously —from 0 - 100 per cent — even for the same condition"
<ref>[http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/ld199900/ldselect/ldsctech/123/12305.htm House of Lords Select Committee on Science and Technology, Sixth Report] Chapter 3: Patient satisfaction, the role of the therapist and the placebo response</ref></blockquote>


==References==
==References==
{{reflist}}
{{reflist}}

Revision as of 06:24, 11 January 2009

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The placebo effect is an effect of a medical treatment that is attributable to an expectation that the treatment will have an effect, i.e., the effect is due to the power of suggestion. Thus the placebo effect can have a true physiologic role as a component of the effect of a treatment.

Formally, it is "an effect usually, but not necessarily, beneficial that is attributable to an expectation that the regimen will have an effect, i.e., the effect is due to the power of suggestion."[1] This means that an active drug or intervention has additional effects, or even the suppression of side effects, due to suggestion by the clinician.

The word placebo was first used in conjunction with medical treatments by William Cullen in the 18th century. Cullen, the leading physician of the day, used it to describe treatments that he gave with the intention of reassuring the patient rather than with any rational expectation that they might be effective through objective physiological mechanisms. | "The placebo effect is nothing new, nor are attempts to enhance its effect unconventional. In fact the history of conventional medicine has largely been the history of the placebo effect... Most medicines used by doctors up until the 20th Century are now known to be inert, but they were often of exotic origin and thus were often perceived as having magical properties. Even today part of the conventional doctor's armoury may include inert capsules and sugar pills. In fact one study showed that 80 per cent of US hospital clinicians admitted to the occasional use of placebo medicines in routine clinical practice....Many studies have been conducted where placebo treatments have been compared to no-treatment controls. Evidence from a wide range of studies indicates that placebo therapies in the context of conventional medicine can provide some relief from a huge range of conditions including allergies, angina, asthma, some forms of cancer, cerebral infarction, depression, diabetes, epilepsy, multiple sclerosis, ulcers and warts. Placebo responses have also been found to vary enormously —from 0 - 100 per cent — even for the same condition" [2] |}

However, for very many conditions, it is now clear that the placebo effect can be very powerful indeed. In 1955, researcher H.K. Beecher published "The Powerful Placebo," in which he concluded that, across 26 studies he analyzed, an average of 32 percent of patients responded to placebo.[3] In the 1960s, many studies showed physiological effects of dummy pills--they tended to speed up pulse rate, increase blood pressure, and improve reaction speeds, for example, when participants were told they had taken a stimulant, and had the opposite effects when participants were told they had taken a sedative.

In the first decade of the 21st century, there was an explosion of research into the placebo effect, as brain imaging technology made it possible to visualise, in human volunteers, the brain activity underlying the placebo effect.

References

  1. Anonymous (2024), Placebo effect (English). Medical Subject Headings. U.S. National Library of Medicine.
  2. House of Lords Select Committee on Science and Technology, Sixth Report Chapter 3: Patient satisfaction, the role of the therapist and the placebo response
  3. H.K. Beecher, cited by Tamar Nordenberg, "The Healing Power of Placebos", FDA Consumer Magazine", January-February 2000, [1]