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  • Top 10 Interesting Facts About the Placebo Effect

  • 10. It Was Discovered to Protect Consumers

  • The first test for the placebo effect took place in the late 18th century after a Connecticut

  • doctor named Elisha Perkins was granted a patent for medical devices he calledtractors.”

  • Perkinstractors were wand-like pieces of metal about three inches long. He claimed

  • that they were made of special materials, but they were really just steel and brass.

  • Perkins said that his tractors could help with sore joint and other aches and pains

  • he charged an enormous amount of money to run his tractors over the sore spot for

  • about 20 minutes, and people claimed they felt better afterwards.

  • Other physicians were dubious about the powers of tractors, so a British doctor named John

  • Haygarth performed tests with different materials like bone, a slate pencil and a tobacco pipe.

  • He found that he could get similar results, and he concluded that any improvement the

  • patient felt was just in the patient’s head.

  • 9. It Has Physical and Psychological Responses

  • The placebo effect may seem like something that’s solely psychological, but there’s

  • strong evidence that your body physically reacts to it. In 2005, researchers at the

  • University of Michigan performed PET scans on 14 healthy young men. Their jaws were injected

  • with a saltwater solution to cause pain. A short time later, they were given a placebo

  • and told that medicine was on its way. On the scans, researchers saw that the area of

  • the brain that releases endorphins was active after the placebo was given. The participants

  • also claimed they felt less pain, and their tolerance for pain went up.

  • A study published in 2001 gave participants a placebo mixed with drugs that blocked endorphins.

  • The result was no placebo effect. While research is still being conducted, these two studies

  • show that endorphins may have a big role to play in making placebos effective.

  • 8. The Bigger the Production, the Bigger the Effect

  • If someone is sick and needs treatment, one of the quickest and most effective ways to

  • treat them is through an injection. That made researchers wonderif pills gave a placebo

  • effect, would a placebo injection be even more effective? Between 1956 and 1965, and

  • then again in 2000 and 2006, there were tests that compared people who received placebo

  • shots and people who were given sugar pills. In all of the studies, they found that when

  • using a medical device such as a needle to give injections the subjects had greater improvements

  • than the people who took the placebo orally. It speaks to the power of the placebo effect

  • that symbols like needles, which are tied to treatment and cures for diseases, play

  • such an important role.

  • 7. Fertility Can Be Affected

  • Even fertility can be affected by the placebo effect. In one study, a group of 55 women

  • that had polycystic ovarian syndrome were trying to get pregnant. Over the course of

  • six months, 33 of the participants were given a placebo and 32 were given fertility drugs.

  • Out of the placebo group, five of the 33 women got pregnant, while seven of the 32 women

  • receiving the drugs were able to get pregnant, making the difference statistically insignificant.

  • In other tests, the pregnancy rate is as high as 40% while taking a placebo. Researchers

  • believe that the women in these tests were less stressed, making them more likely to

  • get pregnant.

  • 6. Placebos Can Negate the Effect of Drugs

  • In most placebo tests, they look to see if a fake drug or treatment can help someone.

  • However, it can also have the opposite effect and suppress the ability of actual drugs if

  • the person isn’t expecting them to do anything. Researchers in Germany and the United Kingdom

  • looked at brain scans of people who were given painkillershalf the group was told they’d

  • be given strong painkillers, while others were just told they’d be given a placebo.

  • They found that people who were told they’d be given the painkillers had signs of relief,

  • while those who thought they were taking a placebo had the effectiveness of the drugs

  • completely eliminated. Positive thinking helps, but expectations are important as well.

  • 5. Price of Treatment Affects Results

  • Researchers at the University of Cincinnati performed a test on 12 people with moderately

  • advanced Parkinson’s. They gave each of them a placebo and told them that they were

  • effective for the treatment of Parkinson’s, but some were told their pills were 15 times

  • more expensive to make than the alternative. Those who received theexpensiveplacebo

  • showed a greater improvement than people who took thecheaperplacebo. In another

  • test, 67% of the participants had improvement from the expensive placebo, while 58% said

  • they felt better after taking the cheap placebo. These tests show how much our expectations

  • play into medical treatment. If someone’s medication costs more, they have higher expectations

  • for it to work.

  • 4. Brand Names Affect Results

  • The perceived cost isn’t the only thing that changes how well a placebo works. Studies

  • have shown that people believe brand name drugs are more effective than generic drugs,

  • even though both drugs are identical in every aspect except for name, color, shape and size.

  • Brand name drugs are much more expensive because pharmaceutical companies put a lot of money

  • into research, development and marketing. A generic drug is released after the patent

  • runs out, which is 15 years after regulators approve it. So while prescribing brand names

  • after that period is an incredible waste of money for insurance companies and patients

  • alike, theyre more effective simply because people think theyll be. Theyre not inherently

  • superior, but we have a tendency to connect brand names to quality.

  • 3. Placebos Work Better Than Ever Before

  • Researchers have found that the placebo effect is getting more powerful, especially in studies

  • that involve antidepressants, anti-anxiety agents and pain relievers. This strange phenomenon

  • has been a problem for pharmaceutical firms, because it makes it more difficult to get

  • drugs approved by the FDA. One theory is that people now have more faith in doctors and

  • pharmaceuticals. During studies for drugs, participants get one-on-one attention from

  • the doctors who prescribe them medication. Just visiting a doctor has therapeutic powers,

  • and then they prescribe drugs that the participants expect to work. Our expectations have been

  • raised, making placebos more effective in an almost cyclical relationship.

  • 2. It Can Still Work Even If You Know

  • Even when people know theyre taking a placebo, the treatment can still be effective if they

  • expect it to be. Researchers at Harvard performed a study on 80 patients who suffered from irritable

  • bowel syndrome (IBS). Half of them didn’t take anything, and the other half took placebo

  • pills. They were plainly told that they wereplacebo pills made of an inert substance,

  • like sugar pills, that have been shown in clinical studies to produce significant improvement

  • in IBS-symptoms through mind-body self-healing processes” (note the difference from entry

  • six, where patients were explicitly told that the placebos didn’t work). They even printed

  • Placebo on the bottle.

  • By the end of the test, about twice as many people in the placebo group felt better than

  • the control group. Amazingly, the known placebos worked as well as some of the strongest IBS

  • medication.

  • 1. Placebo Surgery is Effective

  • It’s one thing to take a pill or receive a shot as a placebo, but surgery is another

  • matter. A surgery physically changes someone, but crazily enough a number of different studies

  • have shown that people feel better and start to heal after placebo surgeries. In Finland,

  • surgeons had patients come in to have surgery to repair torn cartilage. Half the patients

  • received the surgery. The other half were anesthetized, then the doctors cut them open

  • and pretended to perform the surgery, going through all the same motions but not actually

  • operating. Amazingly, both groups improved.

  • Another study found this worked on people with broken vertebrae. Half of the test subjects

  • would go in for vertebroplasty, which would reconstruct the vertebrae, while the other

  • half was given a placebo surgery. In two different trials, they found the placebo surgery worked

  • just as well as the real surgery. There are still a lot of questions about how placebo

  • surgeries work, but the implications

  • are staggering.

Top 10 Interesting Facts About the Placebo Effect

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