| Literature DB >> 27288271 |
Maddy Greville-Harris1, Jennifer Bostock, Amy Din, Cynthia A Graham, George Lewith, Christina Liossi, Tim O'Riordan, Peter White, Lucy Yardley, Felicity L Bishop.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: According to established ethical principles and guidelines, patients in clinical trials should be fully informed about the interventions they might receive. However, information about placebo-controlled clinical trials typically focuses on the new intervention being tested and provides limited and at times misleading information about placebos.Entities:
Keywords: consumer health information; health attitudes; informed consent; placebo effect; qualitative research
Year: 2016 PMID: 27288271 PMCID: PMC4920960 DOI: 10.2196/resprot.5627
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JMIR Res Protoc ISSN: 1929-0748
Figure 1Overview of methods used to develop the website.
Illustrative Quotes from Participants Used to Refine the Website
| Topic | Quote | Modification |
| Content: information on placebo effects | So it’s basically asking a question that yes it can help with your pain. And obviously there’s been quite a big study that shows that it can definitely relieve pain and stiffness. There’s obviously useful information. (Participant 2) | None needed |
| Content: patients’ stories | I think it's good to have a case study. I didn't realize you could do placebo surgeries so that's quite interesting. (…) It's nice to have a picture of the person as well. It's good to have the option to read what he says as well, so if you don't want to read it, you can listen to it. (Participant 3) | None needed |
| Content: technical terms | Maybe explain what ‘mind-body self-healing processes’ are. Um otherwise I think like I understand what it says, yeah. (Participant 1) | Expand on ‘mind-body self-healing’ |
| Content: placebos in clinical practice | What is going through my mind maybe a little bit is maybe kind of if I was to receive the placebo and not actually know. So maybe something that addresses that, how common it is to be given a placebo in the health care sector. (Participant 8) | Add specific details about how many doctors use placebos |
| Style: patients’ stories | Are these the pictures of the actual people who are talking or are they stock pictures? (Participant 6) | Change photos |
| Navigation: menu | Like usual websites have everything on the same page, so it’d have a menu at the side that you always see. So is a bit confusing because I'm going back, but I cannot remember what I've clicked on necessarily. It’s all like a flow, you have to go through it, and back again. I think it might be more useful to have a menu at the edge or something. (Participant 5) | Add a side menu bar that is always available |
Figure 2Overview of structure and contents of website.
Figure 3Example page annotated to highlight key features and their development from evidence-, theory-, and person-based approaches.