Winstonm, on 2021-January-21, 08:51, said:
I think there is a slight misunderstanding of what is meant by the 'Placebo effect' and the opposite the 'Nocebo effect'.
Just to begin, the terms are derived from Latin.
Doctors use foreign language words so that they can speak freely in front of patients - believing that the patient will not be able to understand them.
The idea of using foreign words is sometimes credited to Rene Laennec (inventor of the stethoscope).
Laennec coined the terms Craptitations and Rhonchi to describe the breath sounds that are known in English as crackles and wheeze.
Placebo comes from the Latin and simply means to make acceptable - it's also the root for placate.
Nocebo comes from the same Latin root as noxious.
The 'effects' associated with these words have absolutely nothing to do with causation.
So looking for a physiological reason for them is not sensible. They are not really 'effects' they are phenomena.
Both placebo and nocebo effects are a problem in clinical research because they contaminate the data. In any trial (even 'n of 1' trials - similar to when you see a Doctor) a person my coincidentally get better or worse.
The change in state can be due to many things.
I have high blood pressure (ironically). I get it checked by my GP so that adjustments to my medication can be made if needed.
Yesterday I had it checked - it was a bit high - 5 minutes later normal.
This could be 'white coat hypertension' (unlikely) or just because when I arrived I was in a hurry. The placebo effect can be better characterised as a falling away of some previously active process. Maybe a better term is 'Apobo', but that sounds a bit silly.
The nocebo effect is the opposite. A person taking a compound becomes unwell in some way while taking an active ingredient. The unwellness has nothing to do with the treatment.
In both cases, there can be false positives and negatives. A person may get better because of a previously unidentified effect of the treatment and so on.
non deus ex machina - neither placebo nor nocebo has a physiological basis.
They are a bothersome statistical artefact, not a basis for management.