| Literature DB >> 35120572 |
Julia W Haas1,2, Giulio Ongaro2,3, Eric Jacobson1,2,4, Lisa A Conboy1,2, Judy Nee1, Johanna Iturrino1, Vikram Rangan1, Anthony Lembo1, Ted J Kaptchuk2,4, Sarah Ballou5,6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: There is increasing evidence suggesting that open-label placebo (OLP) is an effective treatment for several medical conditions defined by self-report. However, little is known about patients' experiences with OLP, and no studies have directly compared patients' experiences in double-blind placebo (DBP) conditions.Entities:
Keywords: Irritable bowel syndrome; Open-label placebo; Placebo effect; Qualitative research
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35120572 PMCID: PMC8815135 DOI: 10.1186/s40359-022-00731-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Psychol ISSN: 2050-7283
Selected sample of most relevant interview questions
How did you think about your IBS when you first joined the study? How did you think about placebos? How did you think about peppermint oil? |
Please tell me the story of how the study has gone for you What study experiences stand out the most in your memory? |
How did your first meeting with the doctor go? • What do you remember? • What group were you assigned to? • How did the doctor explain it? • How did you feel about your assignment? • Did you prefer a different group? |
Did you notice any effects from taking the pills? If yes: • When did you notice those effects? • How did the effects go from there? • How do you think taking the pill caused those effects? If no: • Why do you think there weren’t any effects? |
What changed during the time you were in the study? • When did you notice those changes? • How did the changes go over time? • What do you think caused the changes? |
Has being in the study changed how you think about placebos? Has being in the study changed how you think about peppermint oil? Has being in the study changed how you think about your IBS? |
| How do you think your IBS will go in the future? |
Bullet point questions are prompts that were only asked if needed
IBS, irritable bowel syndrome
Bivariate correlations of symptom improvement variables in the double-blind condition
| Symptom improvement | IBS-SSS | Interview | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Yes/Noa | Degreeb | Yes/Noc | Degreed | |||
| IBS-SSS | Yes/Noa | Spearman’s rho | 1 | .658 | .782 | .580 |
| .011 | .001 | .030 | ||||
| Degreeb | Spearman’s rho | .658 | 1 | .772 | .695 | |
| .011 | .001 | .006 | ||||
| Interview | Yes/Noc | Spearman’s rho | .782 | .772 | 1 | 742 |
| .001 | .001 | .002 | ||||
| Degreed | Spearman’s rho | .580 | .695 | 742 | 1 | |
| .030 | .006 | .002 | ||||
Sample size n = 14
IBS-SSS = irritable bowel severity scoring system
a“Yes” is specified as at least 50 points of improvement on the IBS-SSS
bDegree is specified as no (< 50 points improvement on the IBS-SSS), mild (≥ 50 points improvement), moderate (≥ 100 points improvement) or high (≥ 150 points improvement) improvement
c“Yes” is specified as report of any symptom improvement in the interview
dDegree is specified as report of no, mild, moderate or high improvement in the interview
Bivariate correlations of symptom improvement variables in the open-label condition
| Symptom improvement | IBS-SSS | Interview | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Yes/Noa | Degreeb | Yes/Noc | Degreed | |||
| IBS-SSS | Yes/Noa | Spearman’s rho | 1 | .551 | − .149 | − .276 |
| .079 | .662 | .411 | ||||
| Degreeb | Spearman’s rho | .551 | 1 | .329 | .161 | |
| .079 | .324 | .637 | ||||
| Interview | Yes/Noc | Spearman’s rho | − .149 | .329 | 1 | .742 |
| .662 | .324 | .009 | ||||
| Degreed | Spearman’s rho | − .276 | .161 | .742 | 1 | |
| .411 | .637 | .009 | ||||
Sample size n = 11
IBS-SSS = irritable bowel severity scoring system
a “Yes” is specified as at least 50 points of improvement on the IBS-SSS
bDegree is specified as no (< 50 points improvement on the IBS-SSS), mild (≥ 50 points improvement), moderate (≥ 100 points improvement) or high (≥ 150 points improvement) improvement
c “Yes” is specified as report of any symptom improvement in the interview
dDegree is specified as report of no, mild, moderate or high improvement in the interview
Attribution of symptom improvement in the two treatment conditions
| Certainly other reasons | Probably other reasons | Probably treatment | Certainly treatment | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Open-label | 1 | 4 | 1 | 3 |
| Double-blind | 0 | 0 | 4 | 7 |
The attribution categories were specified by quantitizing interview data. Only participants are included who reported any symptom improvement in the interview. The difference between the two groups is statistically significant (Χ2[3] = 8.28; p = .041)