Definitely not, it's David Jameson. No doubt.Is it a given fact that cfs_research is Prof. Sharpe?
Definitely not, it's David Jameson. No doubt.Is it a given fact that cfs_research is Prof. Sharpe?
eta: I've read this page on the site and it all seems very contradictory.
So far as I am aware the placebo effect is primarily about perception of pain, its not about healing.Ironically, a psychology enthusiast that fails to understand psychology of biased self reporting of health and thinks positivity makes the body heal itself.
There are people who view the placebo effect as the power of self-healing. It's not so exceptional.So far as I am aware the placebo effect is primarily about perception of pain, its not about healing.
There is no high quality evidence of this view, at all.There are people who view the placebo effect as the power of self-healing. It's not so exceptional.
No. But as we know, for most people that doesn't matter.There is no high quality evidence of this view, at all.
I think this is a big issue, and suspect it is often better discussed as confounds and biases rather than placebo.the other pseudo-effects that occur in a trial context and which tend to get lumped under 'placebo effect
Michael VanElzakker@MBVanElzakker
Placebo literally does make people feel better - it has anti-inflammatory effects, involves endogenous opioids, etc.
I'd argue that the effects were probably both actual changes and inflated self-report due to social desirability (people want to say that helpers helped)
Evidence?
Ahh yes you are rightIt depends what it is. If it's acupuncture, then sticking pins in skin/tissue probably does have a local endorphin effect and probably does stimulate inflammatory and consequent anti-inflammatory effects. A punch in the face probably does something similar. Exercise? Yep. Sugar pills? Yum [gut bacteria: "YUM!"]. Actually, pretty much anything you can think of as a well-controlled placebo probably does do something like that. The whole point is that you want it to feel like you've done something when you haven't (even though you have).
[Even this answer is a form of placebo...]
This also commonly occurs with positive thinking strategies, leading to profound depression.Obviously, those biases are not a fix to the problem and eventually the patient will see that.
In fact, its a bit of a misnomer to talk about the "placebo effect", and it creates unnecessary confusion. People often use that word to refer to any improvement that occurs in the control arm of a treatment trial. And there are a whole bunch of reasons you might get that improvement:I haven't viewed at the evidence for placebo effect at all, so can't say much about it, but there are folks who think that there is something to it. I have great respect for Michael so I tend to think that there is something to it. It's just that the effect is quite small, but psychologists, of course, like to exaggerate it A LOT.
There is an additional bias coming from poor design of questionnaires that can exploit biases in how people fill in scales etc (as used by people like Chaldea et al)In fact, its a bit of a misnomer to talk about the "placebo effect", and it creates unnecessary confusion. People often use that word to refer to any improvement that occurs in the control arm of a treatment trial. And there are a whole bunch of reasons you might get that improvement:
1. Regression to the mean. In an illness that exhibits some natural fluctuation, people will tend to present at their worst. A portion will improve in time without any treatment. So if you recruit people at the time they present, you will see what appears to be spontaneous improvement over time in your control group.
2. Genuine effects attributable to your 'control' intervention. e.g., saline infusions might improve some symptoms.
3. Expectation-related reporting biases. These are the attentional and memory biases that can occur when someone is expecting, or hoping, to improve. They are artefacts and don't indicate genuine improvement.
4. Attrition. If you have drop outs, you might get what appears to be an artefactual improvement in your control condition, because the drop outs will tend to be the more severely affected patients. So when you lose those people from the cohort, the average scores go up.
1, 2 and 4 can affect both self-report and objective outcome measures. 3. usually only affects self-report measures.
Yes, good point.There is an additional bias coming from poor design of questionnaires that can exploit biases in how people fill in scales etc (as used by people like Chaldea et al)