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Armstrong was too sedated to remember anything, but "I think in some way it helped him to get better," his wife said. He is still recovering through physical therapy.
Dutton said: "You can call it a placebo effect, you can call it a chicken soup effect. It's all about creating the right mental state in the person. The patients tell us they seem to like it. And in pain management, that's the whole goal. If 30 percent of your patients get better on placebo, why not give it to them?"
Swear-by-it stories and anecdotal reports of benefit are one thing. Proving a treatment helps is quite another. Many alternative medicine studies have not included a placebo group -- people who unknowingly get a dummy treatment so its effect can be compared.
Acupuncture is especially hard to research. Positive studies tend to lack comparison groups that have been given a sham treatment. Or they are often done in China, where the treatment is an established part of health care.
One U.S. study found that true acupuncture relieved knee arthritis pain better than fake acupuncture, in which guide tubes were placed but no needles were inserted. But a European study involving twice as many patients and using a more realistic sham procedure found the fake treatment to be just as good. The conclusion: Pain relief was due to the placebo effect.
Advertisements and testimonials from product users can encourage a placebo effect. The Federal Trade Commission last summer reached a settlement over advertising claims for Airborne, a product "invented by a teacher" that was supposed to ward off germs spread through the air.
"Products like Airborne are what we call `credence products.' That's a fancy word for saying it's difficult or impossible for consumers to determine if the product has done anything for them," said commission lawyer Rich Cleland. "Part of that is because of the placebo effect. Part of that is because people don't want to believe they've been ripped off."
Barbara Domen, a former kindergarten teacher in Caswell Beach, N.C., said she was prone to colds and used Airborne six or seven times a year when she flew on planes.
"It worked for me," although it could be because since she retired, "I'm away from all the germs," she said. She skipped it on one flight and caught a terrible cold.
"Maybe it's psychological, but I think I'll continue to use it," she said.
Some placebo effects are due to conditioning, or ascribing benefits to something you did that may in fact have played no role in your improvement. Insomnia is an example, said Michael Perlis, a psychologist and neuroscientist at the University of Pennsylvania.
If you have trouble sleeping one night, your body's need for sleep makes it very likely you'll sleep well the next night. If you take a sleeping pill, you think you slept well because of the pill, he said.
Do any herbal remedies work for insomnia? "Not that I know of," Perlis said. "But all of them have potential to be useful with time. It has nothing to do with them -- it has everything to do with conditioning."
___
On the Net:
FDA article on placebos:
http://tinyurl.com/ycb6zx4
American Cancer Society on placebos:
http://tinyurl.com/ybhtgaw
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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