| Literature DB >> 23819963 |
Sara Chandros Hull1, Luana Colloca, Andrew Avins, Nancy P Gordon, Carol P Somkin, Ted J Kaptchuk, Franklin G Miller.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To examine the attitudes of US patients about the use of placebo treatments in medical care.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23819963 PMCID: PMC3698941 DOI: 10.1136/bmj.f3757
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ ISSN: 0959-8138
Demographic data. Values are number (percentage) of participants unless stated otherwise
| Characteristics | Participants (n=853) |
|---|---|
| Women | 524 (61.4) |
| Men | 329 (38.6) |
| Age group (years): | |
| 18-35 | 280 (32.8) |
| 36-60 | 408 (47.8) |
| ≥61 | 165 (19.3) |
| Mean (SD) age | 45.1 (15.7) |
| Educational level: | |
| Less than high school graduate | 13 (1.5) |
| High school graduate | 107 (117.1) |
| Some college | 316 (37.4) |
| College degree or beyond | 372 (44.5) |
| Race/ethnicity: | |
| White non-Hispanic | 486 (57.7) |
| African-American/other black | 82 (9.7) |
| Hispanic/Latino | 132 (15.7) |
| Asian non-Hispanic | 121 (14.4) |
| American Indian or Alaska Native | 4 (0.5) |
| Native Hawaiian or other Pacific Islander | 7 (0.8) |
| Mixed | 10 (1.2) |
| Self reported health: | |
| Excellent | 170 (20.1) |
| Very good | 359 (42.4) |
| Good | 234 (27.6) |
| Fair | 69 (8.1) |
| Poor | 15 (1.8) |
*Based on Office of Management and Budget categories (www.whitehouse.gov/sites/default/files/omb/assets/information_and_regulatory_affairs/re_app-a-update.pdf).
General opinions about placebo treatments*
| Statements | Opinions (% of participants, 95% CI) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Strongly agree | Somewhat agree | Somewhat disagree | Strongly disagree | |
| Placebo treatments can produce physical changes in the body | 20.1 (17.4 to 22.8) | 49.4 (46.0 to 52.7) | 19.8 (17.1 to 22.5) | 10.7 (8.7 to 12.8) |
| For a placebo treatment to be effective, patients cannot know that they are receiving a placebo treatment | 68.7 (65.6 to 71.9) | 14.3 (12.0 to 16.7) | 7.3 (5.6 to 9.1) | 9.6 (7.6 to 11.6S) |
| Placebo treatments can only be effective if patients trust the physicians who recommend the treatment | 50.7 (47.3 to 54.0) | 30.3 (27.2 to 33.4) | 12.4 (10.1 to 14.6) | 6.77 (5.0 to 8.3) |
| Doctors should never recommend placebo treatments to patients | 11.4 (9.2 to 13.5) | 10.5 (8.5 to 12.6) | 38.7 (35.4 to 42.0) | 39.4 (36.1 to 42.7) |
| It is acceptable for doctors to recommend a placebo treatment if they believe the treatment will benefit the patients and not cause harm | 31.9 (28.8 to 35.1) | 44.3 (41.0 to 47.7) | 12.4 (10.2 to 14.6) | 11.3 (9.2 to 13.5) |
| It is acceptable for doctors to recommend a placebo treatment if they are uncertain about whether the treatment will provide a benefit for patients, so long as the doctors believes it is safe | 14.2 (11.8 to 16.6) | 35.9 (32.6 to 39.1) | 25.6 (22.6 to 28.5) | 24.4 (21.5 to 27.3) |
| In general, it is acceptable for doctors to offer a safe placebo treatment if it addresses the patients’ need to feel like they are being given something to get better† | 30.8 (27.7 to 34.0) | 39.1 (35.8 to 42.4) | 13.2 (10.9 to 15.5) | 16.8 (14.3 to 19.4) |
| If doctors recommend a placebo treatment, it is acceptable for the doctors to tell the patients that this treatment is a real medicine | 20.5 (17.8 to 23.3) | 25.9 (22.9 to 28.8) | 21.0 (18.3 to 23.8) | 32.6 (29.4 to 35.7) |
*Placebo treatment was explained: “A patient experiences a placebo effect when they get better after taking a treatment, not because of the treatment itself, but because the patient expects they will benefit from the treatment. For the rest of this survey, we will ask you to assume that a placebo treatment is a treatment that only works because it can produce a placebo effect. Placebo treatments can be sugar pills or other treatments used to create a placebo effect.”
†Response options for this item were: definitely yes, probably yes, probably not, definitely not.
Acceptability of offering placebo treatments in different scenarios*
| Treatment scenarios | % of participants (95% CI) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Definitely yes | Probably yes | Probably not | Definitely not | |
| Acceptable for doctors to try placebo treatments for stomach pain when patients do not know doctors are recommending a placebo treatment? (Scenario 1, version 1) (n=427) | 30.9 (26.5 to 35.3) | 40.0 (35.4 to 44.7) | 8.9 (6.2 to 11.6) | 20.1 (16.3 to 24.0) |
| Acceptable for doctors to try a placebo treatment for stomach pain when patients are aware that doctors are recommending a placebo treatment? (Scenario 1, version 2) (n=419) | 41.1 (36.3 to 45.8) | 37.5 (32.8 to 42.1) | 8.1 (5.5 to 10.7) | 13.4 (10.1 to 16.6) |
| Acceptable for doctors to give patients placebo treatment for cold symptoms if patients are told that they are getting medicine that is safe, has no side effects, and helps some people get better when they take it? (Scenario 2) | 36.6 (33.3 to 39.80) | 29.0 (25.9 to 32.0) | 9.70 (7.7 to 11.7) | 24.7 (21.8 to 27.6) |
| Acceptable for doctors to recommend antibiotics for patients who want them to treat cold symptoms that are likely to be caused by a viral infection? (Scenario 3) | 2.7 (1.6 to 3.8) | 5.2 (3.7 to 6.7) | 11.1 (9.0 to 13.2) | 81.0 (78.3 to 83.6) |
| Acceptable for doctors to give patients placebo pills for abdominal pain if patients are told they are getting placebo medicine to produce relief through mind-body self healing processes? (Scenario 3) | 57.6 (54.2 to 60.9) | 27.3 (24.3 to 30.4) | 7.3 (5.5 to 9.0) | 7.8 (6.0 to 9.7) |
*See box for detailed scenarios.
Scenarios for query on whether doctors should tell patients when they think a treatment is safe but no better than a placebo*
| Scenarios | % of participants (95% CI) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Definitely yes | Probably yes | Probably not | Definitely not | |
| If patients tell the doctor that they read about the treatment on the internet or in a magazine but have not tried it yet | 63.3 (60.1 to 66.6) | 22.7 (19.9 to 25.6) | 8.3 (6.5 to 10.2) | 5.6 (4.0 to 7.2) |
| If patients tell the doctor that a good friend is using the treatment and felt it was really helping | 49.6 (46.2 to 53.0) | 27.7 (24.7 to 30.7) | 14.6 (12.2 to 17.0) | 8.1 (6.2 to 9.90) |
| If patients tell the doctor that they have been using the treatment for the past two weeks and it seems to be helping | 33.9 (30.7 to 37.1) | 22.5 (19.7 to 25.3) | 25.4 (22.4 to 28.3) | 18.2 (15.6 to 20.8) |
*See box, scenario 4.