So there's an interesting dilemma been brewing in medicine for some while now, concerning placebos and the use of the placebo effect in clinical practice. A recent
study indicates that the strength of the placebo effect can be augmented by "a supportive psychosocial context". Now, the study is for patients with irritable bowel syndrome, a
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In more detail, for me "not lying" trumps "better effect" except in extremis, but I believe that some of the placebo effect can be gotten without lying, if you put some thought into it. Heck, even if it requires belief on the part of the patient, there's some room for working here--get in some "faith healing" of the type the patient believes in to augment whatever the main medical treatment is. For me it'd be Reiki or energy work, for a Christian laying on of hands by a priest/minister, etc.
Another thought (that I'd be curious as to your response to): A while ago, a friend of mine commented to me "Given how big an effect placebos have, why isn't a hypnotist part of the standard battery of specialists I have attending on me (on par with anesthesiologist, surgeon, etc.) when I go into surgery?"
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The medical profession and its regulators should be looking seriously at some of the reasons why patients are going to "natural health" practictioners or what have you.
Here's the first reason - when they're getting reiki, they're not a patient, they're a person, working with a professional and a person, together on their problem. And that person has more than seven minutes to speak with them. And the environment is quiet, and peaceful, and perhaps there's music on. And during the treatment, there's listening, and a real sense of connection.
Of course, at the same time, the reiki practictioner is waving their hands around and doing pretend magic. But what if a real doctor, doing real doctory things, also did all of the above, save the magic?
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I do this by talking about the way the drugs work in the most basic terms I can find. It mostly works for me; the reason most of my patients cite for not taking the meds I prescribe is cost. (The second most common reason is that it wasn't the Percocet they wanted, that Vicodin shit never works, doc). But if I give a placebo, I need to make something up. Not sure I'm OK with that.
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I agree, having to make something up to get them to take it does introduce an ethical question I was not seeing earlier.
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If they gave something that was a mild painkiller, but wasn't constipatey which can't be good in this sitch... and/or something that was a good supplement for bowel health then they wouldn't be lying... and could still cash in on giving the patient some relief and leveraging the functional augmentation that seems to be a part of it all.
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Yeah. It's a slippery slope alright. Especially in more hardcore instances where people missing out on real treatments. Like the House episode where 13 thinks she's getting better in a drug trial but then Foreman finds out she's on the placebo and switches her.
Everything is a slippery slope it seems....
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I also suspect that there are things that we think are placebos that actually have some physiological mechanism behind them, and things that we think are “drugs” whose actual benefit is mostly placebo effect. (In theory, testing for efficacy ought to decrease that, but if the drug gives you a mild tingly sensation and that’s all it does, it might be a more effective placebo than the other placebo.)
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