| Literature DB >> 18948346 |
Jon C Tilburt1, Ezekiel J Emanuel, Ted J Kaptchuk, Farr A Curlin, Franklin G Miller.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To describe the attitudes and behaviours regarding placebo treatments, defined as a treatment whose benefits derive from positive patient expectations and not from the physiological mechanism of the treatment itself.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2008 PMID: 18948346 PMCID: PMC2572204 DOI: 10.1136/bmj.a1938
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ ISSN: 0959-8138
Characteristics of 679 US physicians questioned about use of placebos. Figures are numbers (percentages) of responses apart from age
| Characteristics | No (%)* |
|---|---|
| Mean (range) age (years) | 51 (28-88) |
| Male | 477/652 (73) |
| Race/ethnicity: | |
| Asian | 89/648 (14) |
| African American | 14/648 (2) |
| White | 526/648 (81) |
| Other | 19/648 (3) |
| Specialty: | |
| Internal medicine | 334/679 (49) |
| Rheumatology | 345/679 (51) |
| Practice setting: | |
| Solo | 186/679 (27) |
| Group | 334/679 (49) |
| Institutional | 28/679 (4) |
| Academic | 96/679 (14) |
| Other | 24/679 (4) |
| Region: | |
| South | 253/679 (37) |
| North east | 219/679 (32) |
| Midwest | 108/679 (16) |
| West | 99/679 (15) |
*Percentages based on actual numbers of respondents as shown.
Attitudes and behaviours related to prescribing placebos among 679 US general internists and rheumatologists
| Question and categories of response | No (%*) |
|---|---|
| How likely are you to recommend sugar pill proved to be better than no treatment for fibromyalgia?: | |
| Very likely | 160/654 (24) |
| Moderately likely | 221/654 (34) |
| Unlikely | 205/654 (31) |
| Definitely not | 68/654 (10) |
| How often do you recommend treatment primarily to enhance patient expectation?: | |
| Never | 129/646 (20) |
| ≤1/month | 219/646 (34) |
| 2-3/month | 182/646 (28) |
| ≤1/week | 116/646 (18) |
| Is it appropriate to recommend treatment primarily to promote patients’ expectations?: | |
| Obligatory | 19/642 (3) |
| Permissible | 380/642 (59) |
| Permissible only in rare circumstance | 197/642 (31) |
| Never permissible | 46/642 (7) |
*Based on actual numbers.
Treatments used as placebo in past year and how they are described to patients among 679 US general internists and rheumatologists
| Question and response items | No (%*) |
|---|---|
| Recommended as “placebo treatment” in past year: | |
| At least one of any type | 370/679 (55) |
| Over counter analgesics | 267/648 (41) |
| Vitamins | 243/648 (38) |
| Sedatives | 86/652 (13) |
| Antibiotics | 85/644 (13) |
| Saline | 18/623 (3) |
| Sugar pills | 12/642 (2) |
| How placebo treatments are typically described to patients: | |
| Not used | 285/637 (45) |
| Medicine | 62/352 (18) |
| Placebo | 18/352 (5) |
| Medicine with no known effects for your condition | 31/352 (9) |
| Medicine not typically used for your condition but might benefit you | 241/352 (68) |
*Based on actual numbers of respondents. All 679 respondents answered most questions. Percentages reflect 352 responses of 637 respondents who deemed the question relevant. The 285 respondents who marked “irrelevant—I do not prescribe placebo treatments” were not included in these percentages.
Characteristics of US internists and rheumatologists independently associated with having recommended placebo treatment at least 2-3 times/month
| Characteristics | Odds ratio* (95% CI) |
|---|---|
| Age | 0.99 (0.97 to 1.01) |
| Male | 0.76 (0.52 to 1.11) |
| White race | 1.32 (0.85 to 2.06) |
| Specialty: | |
| Internal medicine | 0.82 (0.58 to 1.16) |
| Rheumatology | — |
| Practice setting: | |
| Solo | — |
| Group | 0.97 (0.66 to 1.43) |
| Institutional | 0.72 (0.31 to 1.66) |
| Academic | 0.73 (0.43 to 1.23) |
| Other | 0.96 (0.40 to 2.35) |
| Region: | |
| North east | — |
| South | 1.47 (0.99 to 2.16) |
| Midwest | 0.72 (0.43 to 1.21) |
| West | 1.01 (0.61 to 1.71) |
*Based on responses of 637 observations included in model.