He is currently working on a mega-study of the benefits of doctor empathy."
I suppose they do exist, but who would choose? ....perhaps a subjective questionnaire...’please rank on a scale of 1-10 how empathic are you with your patients?’In my personal experience finding a doctor with empathy would be the first challenge in running a study like this.
The article says a placebo could be given as treatment if a dr was honest but how, surely the placebo has to be believed it’s something else for it to have effect?
I suppose they do exist, but who would choose?
Just watched it. The researchers say they have evidence from brain scans that when the placebo works it's because the body produces its own natural endorphins.
In the experiment they did for the TV they put the group, who all had long term back pain, on placebos for 3 weeks. 45% said they had some benefit. The program focused most of its attention on a few who said they had benefited. After telling them all that they had been on placebo, quite a lot of the group that benefited decided to stay on the placebo and he went back 3 weeks later and some were still saying it helped.
Given that activity is now recommended for back pain, perhaps the fact that the ones who felt some relief from natural endorphins then became more active, so a 'virtuous circle' enabled their backs to improve from the exercise.
It was such a short term experiment it's impossible to say whether it was partly also the excitement of being on TV and all the attention they were getting that helped too.
Agreed. There are definitely some back conditions (this occasionally happens to me) that you do have to gently exercise your way back out of. (There is nothing wrong with this strategy when applied to conditions which respond favourably to it). If my back 'goes', I take pain killers for a few days so that I can sensibly do fairly normal stuff, but gently; if I gave up on it instead, things would just get worse as my back became weaker.Given that activity is now recommended for back pain, perhaps the fact that the ones who felt some relief from natural endorphins then became more active, so a 'virtuous circle' enabled their backs to improve from the exercise.
The Horizon program is available on bbc iplayer
https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b0bmblb8
I thought it was interesting, but they did also get some of the participants to have extra-long, more attentive GP appointments (30 mins instead of 10),
Looking more closely it seems that people were told they might get a placebo but they were not told the objective of the study or that everyone was going to get a placebo. That sounds equally illegal.
Gets a bit tricky. Placebo is intrinsically reliant on an element of deceit. Just that you should tell people beforehand that you might be going to deceive them.There’s a brief interview with Dr mosely here http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m0000ml6 about fifty minutes in. He’s quite happy with there being “deceit” there. He’s also saying some of the people were so bad as to be in wheelchairs etc.
I don’t see how it’s ethical to tell people in wheelchairs on morphine they’re trying a great new pain relief or placebo and then give them all placebo. If the trial had failed, they might justifiably feel WTH. But the info derived is interesting. Did get odd when it was discussed if drs should openly prescribe placebos, NHS dream no doubt.Gets a bit tricky. Placebo is intrinsically reliant on an element of deceit. Just that you should tell people beforehand that you might be going to deceive them.
Gets a bit tricky. Placebo is intrinsically reliant on an element of deceit. Just that you should tell people beforehand that you might be going to deceive them.
"Not only did we make it absolutely clear that these pills had no active ingredient and were made from inert substances, but we actually had 'placebo' printed on the bottle," said Kaptchuk. "We told the patients that they didn't have to even believe in the placebo effect. Just take the pills."
The results, published in the scientific journal PLoS ONE, showed that the placebo pills were more effective at relieving symptoms compared with doing nothing at all.
All I'm saying is that if people give their informed consent to knowing they may be given a real medication or a fake one, then that to me is OK, though I'm not sure if that was properly done in this TV-drama version.I don’t see how it’s ethical to tell people in wheelchairs on morphine they’re trying a great new pain relief or placebo and then give them all placebo. If the trial had failed, they might justifiably feel WTH. But the info derived is interesting. Did get odd when it was discussed if drs should openly prescribe placebos, NHS dream no doubt.