Placebo Effect: Shreyasi Pawar, 503
Placebo Effect: Shreyasi Pawar, 503
Placebo Effect: Shreyasi Pawar, 503
EFFECT
~ SHREYASI PAWAR , 503
INTRODUCTION
The effect of a treatment that arises from a patient’s expectations and response to
the treatment, excluding the treatment’s specific action .
The meaning response goes well beyond psychological effects and results in
physiological changes as well.
The term placebo is Latin and means ‘I shall please’. This reflects the historical
use of placebos to placate patients whose complaints could not otherwise be treated.
It also indicates a belief that while the placebos might please patients, they are not
3. If the person dispensing the placebo shows their care towards the patient, is friendly
and sympathetic, or has a high expectation of a treatment’s success, then the placebo
would be more effectual.
4. The colour of a placebo can influence its effects . When administered without
information about whether they are stimulants or depressives, blue placebo pills
produce depressant effects, whereas red placebos induce stimulant effects. Patients
report falling asleep significantly more quickly after taking a blue capsule than after
taking an orange capsule. Red placebos seem to be more effective pain relievers than
white, blue or green placebos.
Application
Placebo in clinical trials
During the 1950s, the possibility that placebo treatment might have real effects
became more widely recognized, and the use of placebo controls in medical research
became common. In case after case, medicines and treatment procedures that had
been ‘proven’ effective in clinical trials were found to be no more effective than treatment by placebo.
It was suggested that placebos could reduce the frequency of asthma attacks, relieve hay fever,
suppress coughs, alleviate tension and anxiety, cure headaches, reduce pain, prevent colds and
alleviate cold symptoms, cure ulcers, inhibit symptoms of withdrawal from narcotics, alter
gastric function, control the blood sugar levels of diabetics, reduce enuresis, lessen
the severity of arthritis, reduce the frequency and severity of angina attacks and
reverse the growth of malignant tumours. These data led to the concept of ‘the
5. Toxicity
6. Placebo responders to be
excluded
Psychological Perspective
● Currently, the two most popular explanations of the placebo effect are classical
conditioning and response expectancy.
Example – whenever you come home wearing a baseball cap, you take your child
to the park to play. So, whenever your child sees you come home with a baseball
cap, he is excited because he has associated your baseball cap with a trip to the
park.
Response Expectancy are anticipation of automatic subjective responses (e.g.
expected response. Thus, the anticipation of anxiety makes people anxious, the belief
than one will stay depressed forever is very depressing, and the anticipation of
changes in pain alters the perception of pain. More generally, subjective experience
external stimuli and partially by the person’s beliefs, expectations and interpretations
of those stimuli. As applied to the placebo effect, expectancy theory asserts that
Example – A placebo antidepressant leads people to expect a change in their depression, and
that expectation makes them feel less depressed. A shortcoming of expectancy theory
is that it does not easily account for the physical effects of placebos.
Placebo psychotherapy
Given the importance of placebo effects in medical interventions, it was only
natural that researchers began to question the degree to which the effects of
studies were designed to include placebo psychotherapies, the effects of which can be
compared to the genuine treatment. At first glance, this strategy seems reasonable,
but, in fact, it is very problematic. There are both practical and conceptual problems
with attempts to extend the placebo concept from the medical setting to the
sense to try.
Conclusion
Placebo effects are not limited to drug treatments. Any medical procedure can
have effects due to the physical properties of the treatment and effects due to its
can be tested by comparing its effects to those of a sham medication, so too the
comparison with sham procedures (e.g. sham surgery). For example, real and sham
surgery have been compared in the treatment of angina and osteoporosis of the knee.
In both cases, the effects appear to be due to the psychological properties of the