A new look at the placebo effect

A new conceptualization of the placebo effects is presented in the current issue of Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics.

Placebo effects are often attributed to clinical interactions and that affect expectations of the patient about the treatment and result in symptom changes. The prevailing conceptualization consists of an undifferentiated response that needs to be minimized in controlled investigations and maximized in clinical practice. However, is the cumulative result of the interaction of several classes of variables with a selected treatment: living conditions (housing, nutrition, work environment, social support), patient characteristics (age, sex, genetics, general health conditions, personality, well-being), illness features and previous therapeutic experience, self-management, and treatment setting (physician's attitude and attention, illness behavior). Such variables may be therapeutic or countertherapeutic, and are unlikely to be simply additive.

In certain patients their interactive combination may lead to clinical improvement, whereas in other cases it may produce no effect, and, in a third group, it may lead to worsening of the condition. Maximizing patients' expectations does not necessarily result in sustained effects and, in due course, may lead to worsening of the condition (violation of expectations).

Fava and colleagues outline a multifactorial conceptual model that may have implications for the design of clinical trials as well as for , with special reference to psychopharmacology and psychotherapy. The effects of drug treatment may be potentiated by specific nonpharmacological treatment strategies, and this synergism may disclose significant differences against placebo. Medical outcomes may be unsatisfactory not because technical interventions are missing, but because our conceptual models and thinking are inadequate.

More information: Giovanni A. Fava et al. The Clinical Inadequacy of the Placebo Model and the Development of an Alternative Conceptual Framework, Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics (2017). DOI: 10.1159/000480038

Journal information: Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics
Provided by Journal of Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics
Citation: A new look at the placebo effect (2018, January 3) retrieved 19 April 2024 from https://medicalxpress.com/news/2018-01-placebo-effect.html
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