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The placebo effect! When a patient gets treatment for a particular illness or disease, that person gets healed from that treatment. This treatment work in two ways, one is the medical effect of those medicines and other one is the perception (belief) of the patient that the given medicine will cure him or her.
Many a time the perception (belief) is positive, which supports the treatment. But other times it can be negative and create side effects for a given treatment.
If you have faith in a particular doctor, like whenever you take treatment from him, within one or two days you get cured. This perception is sometimes so strong that even if a doctor gives you sugar pills, you will be cured. This miracle happens in real life! We shall call it the placebo effect. There are a few other terminologies for this effect as perception effect or belief effect.
On another side, if the patient is getting treatment from a doctor, but he is not having faith in that treatment or in that doctor, treatment may not work at all or take a longer duration. This negative effect is called a nocebo effect.
Definition of Placebo Effect:
The placebo effect is the positive effect on a person’s health experienced after taking a placebo. It is triggered by the person’s belief in the benefit of the treatment and their expectation of feeling better, rather than the characteristics of the placebo.
A placebo is a substance or treatment which is designed to have no therapeutic value. Common placebos include inert tablets (like sugar pills), inert injections (like saline), sham surgery, and other procedures.
Definition of Nocebo Effect:
A nocebo effect occurs when the recipient of an inert substance reports a negative effect or a worsening of symptoms, with the outcome resulting not from the substance itself, but from negative expectations about the treatment.
Nocebo, A negative placebo effect, for example, when patients taking medications experiences adverse side effects unrelated to the specific pharmacological action of the drug.
Real-life Case Studies
During their medical study, every student learns, that the mind can affect the body. They learn that some people get better when they believe (falsely) they are getting medicine.
In the words of Bruce H Lipton, “The placebo effect should be a major topic of study in medical school. I believe that medical education should train doctors to recognize the power of our internal resources. Doctors should not dismiss the power of the mind as something inferior to the power of chemicals and the scalpel”.
The placebo effect not only works in general treatment but also in surgery. Below case study is illustrated in the book titled “The Biology of Belief”, written by Bruce H Lipton.
Knee Surgery Case Study
“A Baylor School of Medicine study, published in 2002 in the New England Journal of Medicine, evaluated surgery for patients with severe, debilitating knee pain. (Moseley, et al, 2002) The lead author of the study, Dr. Bruce Moseley, “knew” that knee surgery helped his patients: “All good surgeons know there is no placebo effect in surgery.” But Moseley was trying to figure out which part of the surgery was giving his patients relief. The patients in the study were divided into three groups. Moseley shaved the damaged cartilage in the knee of one group. For another group, he flushed out the knee joint, removing material thought to be causing the inflammatory effect. Both of these constitute standard treatment for arthritic knees. The third group got “fake” surgery. The patient was sedated, Moseley made three standard incisions and then talked and acted just as he would have during a real surgery—he even splashed salt water to simulate the sound of the knee-washing procedure. After forty minutes, Moseley sewed up the incisions as if he had done the surgery. All three groups were prescribed the same postoperative care, which included an exercise program.
Impact of Placebo Effect on Surgery
The results were shocking. Yes, the groups who received surgery, as expected, improved. But the placebo group improved just as much as the other two groups! Despite the fact that there are 650,000 surgeries yearly for arthritic knees, at a cost of about $5,000 each, the results were clear to Moseley: “My skill as a surgeon had no benefit on these patients. The entire benefit of surgery for osteoarthritis of the knee was the placebo effect.”
Television news programs graphically illustrated the stunning results. Footage showed members of the placebo group walking and playing basketball, in short doing things they reported they could not do before their “surgery.” The placebo patients didn’t find out for two years that they had gotten fake surgery. One member of the placebo group, Tim Perez, who had to walk with a cane before the surgery, is now able to play basketball with his grandchildren. He summed up the theme of this book when he told the Discovery Health Channel: “In this world, anything is possible when you put your mind to it. I know that your mind can work miracles.”
Studies have shown the placebo effect to be powerful in treating other diseases, including asthma and Parkinson’s. In the treatment of depression, placebos are stars. So much so that psychiatrist Walter Brown of the Brown University School of Medicine has proposed placebo pills as the first treatment for patients with mild or moderate depression. (Brown 1998) Patients would be told that they’re getting a remedy with no active ingredient, but that shouldn’t dampen the pills’ effectiveness. Studies suggest that even when people know they’re not getting a drug, the placebo pills still work.”
Perception of the new place (No Sleep)!
Many a time, some of our friends or relatives create the perception that they are not able to sleep well in new places. When I was speaking about this perception-based effect, one of my relatives shared a real incident. Her sister’s mother-in-law visited her home, and as that place was new to the mother-in-law, she cited several times she will not be able to sleep. This happens to her at each new place unless she consumes sleeping pills. On that particular day, no sleeping pill was available, the result was, she almost awaken a full night.
In my opinion, this is a mere false belief set by her in mind and most of you now know, how our beliefs work. Whatever we plant in our beliefs (positive or negative), our subconscious mind supports them irrespective of their nature.
“If the brain expects that a treatment will work, it sends healing chemicals into the bloodstream, which facilitates that. That’s why the placebo effect is so powerful for every type of healing. And the opposite is equally true and equally powerful: When the brain expects that a therapy will not work, it doesn’t. It’s called the “nocebo” effect.” -Bruce H. Lipton