WellBeing

All in the mind

Imagine a treatment that can relieve pain, improve sleep, reduce stress, ease nausea and reduce depression. In fact, it can help with almost any illness you can imagine. It’s free, available everywhere and has no nasty side-effects. It’s not new, nor is it high-tech.

That treatment is the placebo effect — the mind-body phenomenon that has been scorned for decades in medicine, but which contemporary science is proving to have powerful potential for healing.

The term “placebo effect”, also known as the “placebo response”, is used in medical literature to describe what happens when a “fake” treatment, such as a sugar pill or sham acupuncture, improves a patient’s condition.

It was first used in this context in 1955 by US physician Henry Beecher. In a now-famous article, Beecher collected data from 15 studies with 1082 patients suffering varying degrees of pain. He showed that a placebo painkiller was effective in an average of 35.2 per cent of cases. Since then, innumerable researchers have verified the importance of the placebo effect in treatment for a range of conditions.

Researchers use groups receiving a placebo treatment in their studies to help separate how much benefit comes from the so-called active treatment (such as a drug or type of therapy) from what can be attributed to the placebo response. Placebo effects generally occur in about 30 per cent of cases.

Shifting the stigma

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from WellBeing

WellBeing6 min read
Gifts Of Love
Saying “I love you” is never an easy thing. Declarations of love are like walking naked onto a stage before a packed auditorium: you hope for appreciative murmurings followed by rapturous applause, but you utterly dread an embarrassed silence or, eve
WellBeing8 min readCrime & Violence
Breaking Out Of Prison The Search For Humane Pathways
Many informed observers consider jail a blunt instrument that doesn’t work particularly well for most prisoners, while also a necessary evil for managing crime. In their view, spending more money on keeping more people locked up is not a solution. On
WellBeing2 min read
Green Beat
A “data centre” is a physical location housing computing systems and their associated hardware. These data centres typically operate at temperatures between 20 and 25°C. To achieve these temperatures, the centres are cooled via “free-cooling” using a

Related Books & Audiobooks