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It's a small study, dealing just with pain. But the results may apply to a range of drug therapies, especially in chronic diseases because so many of those patients are conditioned by months or years or frustrating treatment failures, concluded lead researcher Dr. Ulrike Bingel of Hamburg's University Medical Center, who teamed with Oxford University researchers for the study.
Learning how anxiety influences pain is crucial to understanding this nocebo effect -- how you get the pain you expect, said co-author and Oxford neuroscientist Irene Tracey, in a recent review of the science of expectations in the journal Nature Medicine.
It's by no means a novel concept. Previous research has found people given a dummy pill can experience the side effects of the medication they thought they were getting.
While there's a lot yet to learn, for now doctors should at least try building closer relationships with their patients to encourage trust in recommended treatments, said Mass General's Gollub.
"Building these strong, positive expectations for doing well are part of what comes from believing in your treater as someone who cares about you," she said.
Directly managing patients' expectations -- spelling out exactly what will happen at different points to take away some of the fear -- also can help, said Cohen, chief of spine surgery at Brooklyn Hospital Center in New York. He teaches new doctors not to promise surgery patients they'll wake up free from pain because -- while the old back pain may be fading -- they're going to hurt from the operation.
When someone says, "'Wow, it's just like he told it was going to be, this guy told me the truth,' now you've got this bond of confidence," Cohen said. "You're partnering with your patient."
[Associated
Press;
Lauran Neergaard covers health and medical issues for The Associated Press in Washington.
Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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