Literature DB >> 8942043

Placebo effect and placebo concept: a critical methodological and conceptual analysis of reports on the magnitude of the placebo effect.

G S Kienle1, H Kiene.   

Abstract

Since 1955, when HK Beecher published his classic "The Powerful Placebo," it generally has been accepted that 35% of patients with any of a wide variety of disorders can be treated with placebos alone. In recent years, average cure rates of 70%, and up to 100%, also have been quoted. Like pharmacological preparations, placebos are credited with possessing time-effect curves; cumulation and carry-over effects; differentiated actions depending on color, size, or packaging; even toxic effects. It has been postulated that placebos can prolong life, that their effects occur in surgery as well as in medicine, and that they are mediated by endorphins. In this article source material that forms the scientific basis for such claims is examined. Analysis shows that the studies on which such ideas are based, except perhaps in bronchial asthma, do not in any way justify the conclusions drawn from them. The truth is that the placebo effect is counterfeited by a variety of factors including the natural history of the disease, regression to the mean, concomitant treatments, obliging reports, experimental subordination, severe methodological defects in the studies, misquotations, etc; even, on occasion, by the fact that the supposed placebo is actually not a placebo, but has to be acknowledged as having a specific action on the condition for which it is being given. A further reason for misjudgment is the lack of clarity of the placebo concept itself. Experimental subordination and conditioning are other areas of insufficient conceptual differentiation. The authors conclude that the literature relating to the magnitude and frequency of the placebo effect is unfounded and grossly overrated, if not entirely false. They pose the question whether the existence of the so-called placebo effect is itself not largely-or indeed totally-illusory.

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Year:  1996        PMID: 8942043

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Altern Ther Health Med        ISSN: 1078-6791            Impact factor:   1.305


  11 in total

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Review 2.  Placebo analgesia: friend or foe?

Authors:  Donald D Price; Roger B Fillingim; Michael E Robinson
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Review 3.  The power of the placebo.

Authors:  Ron Eccles
Journal:  Curr Allergy Asthma Rep       Date:  2007-05       Impact factor: 4.806

Review 4.  Experimental designs and brain mapping approaches for studying the placebo analgesic effect.

Authors:  Luana Colloca; Fabrizio Benedetti; Carlo Adolfo Porro
Journal:  Eur J Appl Physiol       Date:  2007-10-25       Impact factor: 3.078

5.  Importance of placebo effect in cough clinical trials.

Authors:  Ron Eccles
Journal:  Lung       Date:  2009-09-16       Impact factor: 2.584

Review 6.  Progesterone for premenstrual syndrome.

Authors:  Olive Ford; Anne Lethaby; Helen Roberts; Ben Willem J Mol
Journal:  Cochrane Database Syst Rev       Date:  2012-03-14

7.  The placebo effect: plugging the nostrils of unmet needs.

Authors:  James N Baraniuk
Journal:  Curr Allergy Asthma Rep       Date:  2009-03       Impact factor: 4.806

8.  Expectancy, Self-Efficacy, and Placebo Effect of a Sham Supplement for Weight Loss in Obese Adults.

Authors:  Kimberly M Tippens; Jonathan Q Purnell; William L Gregory; Erin Connelly; Douglas Hanes; Barry Oken; Carlo Calabrese
Journal:  J Evid Based Complementary Altern Med       Date:  2014-07

Review 9.  Placebo analgesia: cognitive influences on therapeutic outcome.

Authors:  Alison Watson; Andrea Power; Christopher Brown; Wael El-Deredy; Anthony Jones
Journal:  Arthritis Res Ther       Date:  2012-03-30       Impact factor: 5.156

Review 10.  Placebo effect in clinical trial design for irritable bowel syndrome.

Authors:  Eric Shah; Mark Pimentel
Journal:  J Neurogastroenterol Motil       Date:  2014-04-30       Impact factor: 4.924

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