Literature DB >> 30238795

From substance to process: A meta-ethnographic review of how healthcare professionals and patients understand placebos and their effects in primary care.

Doug I Hardman1, Adam Wa Geraghty1, George Lewith1, Mark Lown1, Clelia Viecelli1, Felicity L Bishop1.   

Abstract

Research suggests that a 'placebo' can improve conditions common in primary care including pain, depression and irritable bowel syndrome. However, disagreement persists over the definition and clinical relevance of placebo treatments. We conducted a meta-ethnographic, mixed-research systematic review to explore how healthcare professionals and patients understand placebos and their effects in primary care. We conducted systematic literature searches of five databases - augmented by reference chaining, key author searches and expert opinion - related to views on placebos, placebo effects and placebo use in primary care. From a total of 34 eligible quantitative, qualitative and mixed-methods articles reporting findings from 28 studies, 21 were related to healthcare professionals' views, 11 were related to patients' views and two were related to both groups. In the studies under review, healthcare professionals reported using placebos at markedly different frequencies. This was highly influenced by how placebos were defined in the studies. Both healthcare professionals and patients predominantly defined placebos as material substances such as 'inert' pills, despite this definition being inconsistent with current scientific thinking. However, healthcare professionals also, but less prevalently, defined placebos in a different way: as contextual processes. This better concurs with modern placebo definitions, which focus on context, ritual, meaning and enactivism. However, given the enduring ubiquity of substance definitions, for both healthcare professionals and patients, we question the practical, clinical validity of stretching the term 'placebo' towards its modern iteration. To produce 'placebo effects', therefore, primary healthcare professionals may be better off abandoning placebo terminology altogether.

Entities:  

Keywords:  meta-ethnography; placebo effects; placebos; primary care; systematic review

Mesh:

Year:  2018        PMID: 30238795     DOI: 10.1177/1363459318800169

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Health (London)        ISSN: 1363-4593


  9 in total

1.  Treating Pain With Open-Label Placebos: A Qualitative Study With Post-Surgical Pain Patients.

Authors:  Michael H Bernstein; Nathaniel Fuchs; Maayan Rosenfield; Arnold-Peter Weiss; Charlotte Blease; Cosima Locher; Molly Magill; Josiah Rich; Francesca L Beaudoin
Journal:  J Pain       Date:  2021-05-15       Impact factor: 5.820

2.  Placebo comparator group selection and use in surgical trials: the ASPIRE project including expert workshop.

Authors:  David J Beard; Marion K Campbell; Jane M Blazeby; Andrew J Carr; Charles Weijer; Brian H Cuthbertson; Rachelle Buchbinder; Thomas Pinkney; Felicity L Bishop; Jonathan Pugh; Sian Cousins; Ian Harris; L Stefan Lohmander; Natalie Blencowe; Katie Gillies; Pascal Probst; Carol Brennan; Andrew Cook; Dair Farrar-Hockley; Julian Savulescu; Richard Huxtable; Amar Rangan; Irene Tracey; Peter Brocklehurst; Manuela L Ferreira; Jon Nicholl; Barnaby C Reeves; Freddie Hamdy; Samuel Cs Rowley; Naomi Lee; Jonathan A Cook
Journal:  Health Technol Assess       Date:  2021-09       Impact factor: 4.014

3.  Placebos in primary care? a nominal group study explicating UK GP and patient views of six theoretically plausible models of placebo practice.

Authors:  Mohana Ratnapalan; Beverly Coghlan; Mengxin Tan; Hazel Everitt; Adam W A Geraghty; Paul Little; George Lewith; Felicity L Bishop
Journal:  BMJ Open       Date:  2020-02-18       Impact factor: 2.692

4.  Integrating Placebo Effects in General Practice: A Cross-Sectional Survey to Investigate Perspectives From Health Care Professionals in the Netherlands.

Authors:  Rosanne M Smits; Dieuwke S Veldhuijzen; Henriët van Middendorp; Marianne J E van der Heijden; Monique van Dijk; Andrea W M Evers
Journal:  Front Psychiatry       Date:  2022-01-12       Impact factor: 4.157

5.  Harnessing Placebo Effects in Primary Care: Using the Person-Based Approach to Develop an Online Intervention to Enhance Practitioners' Communication of Clinical Empathy and Realistic Optimism During Consultations.

Authors:  Kirsten A Smith; Jane Vennik; Leanne Morrison; Stephanie Hughes; Mary Steele; Riya Tiwari; Jennifer Bostock; Jeremy Howick; Christian Mallen; Paul Little; Mohana Ratnapalan; Emily Lyness; Pranati Misurya; Geraldine M Leydon; Hajira Dambha-Miller; Hazel A Everitt; Felicity L Bishop
Journal:  Front Pain Res (Lausanne)       Date:  2021-08-24

6.  Placebo From an Enactive Perspective.

Authors:  Iñigo R Arandia; Ezequiel A Di Paolo
Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2021-06-02

7.  A discursive exploration of public perspectives on placebos and their effects.

Authors:  Doug I Hardman; Adam Wa Geraghty; Jeremy Howick; Nia Roberts; Felicity L Bishop
Journal:  Health Psychol Open       Date:  2019-02-15

Review 8.  The impact of contextual factors on nursing outcomes and the role of placebo/nocebo effects: a discussion paper.

Authors:  Alvisa Palese; Giacomo Rossettini; Luana Colloca; Marco Testa
Journal:  Pain Rep       Date:  2019-06-07

Review 9.  Context matters: the psychoneurobiological determinants of placebo, nocebo and context-related effects in physiotherapy.

Authors:  Giacomo Rossettini; Eleonora Maria Camerone; Elisa Carlino; Fabrizio Benedetti; Marco Testa
Journal:  Arch Physiother       Date:  2020-06-11
  9 in total

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