| Literature DB >> 32774310 |
Michael H Bernstein1, Cosima Locher2,3, Tobias Kube4,5, Sarah Buergler3, Sif Stewart-Ferrer6, Charlotte Blease4,7.
Abstract
Research in social psychology demonstrates that physical environmental factors - or "artifacts" such as provider clothing and office décor - can influence health outcomes. However, the role of artifacts in augmenting or diminishing health outcomes is under-explored in the burgeoning discipline of placebo studies. In this paper, we argue that a careful consideration of artifacts may carry significant potential in informing how placebo effects can be maximized, and nocebo effects minimized in clinical settings. We discuss the potential mechanisms, including classical conditioning, response expectancy, and mindsets, by which artifacts might enhance or diminish these effects. Next, we propose testable hypotheses to investigate how placebo and nocebo effects might be elicited by artifacts in care settings, and conclude by providing innovative research designs to advance this novel research agendum.Entities:
Keywords: classical conditioning; expectancy; mindset; placebo; placebo effects; psychology
Year: 2020 PMID: 32774310 PMCID: PMC7387723 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2020.01354
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
Artifacts and placebo effects: Future research directions.
| Artifacts influence on provider behavior | (1) Enriched artifacts within medical setting | Evaluate whether artifacts are associated with provider behavior change and increased placebo effects: e.g., do enriched artifacts cause doctors to engage in more eye contact or behave more empathically, as judged by blinded third-party raters |
| Artifact impact on placebo effect | (1) Sham treatment, enriched artifacts | Evaluate whether sham acupuncture is more efficacious when delivered by a well-, versus neutrally-, versus poorly-dressed provider |
| Balanced placebo design with enrichment | (1) Verum treatment, enriched setting | Examine the interaction between treatment (verum versus sham) and office décor (well-furnished v. poorly furnished) on healthcare outcomes. |