Placebo & the Placebo Effect
Definition, biology, the placebo reactor & nocebo, the placebo-control arm, blinding, trial designs and ethics — an RGUHS methodology LAQ
Past RGUHS + DNB + MPMSU + MUHS + VNSGU · 23
RGUHSSep '25
DNBJun '25
DNBMay '24
RGUHSMay '22
DNBJun '22
VNSGUJun '21
RGUHSJun '20
MPMSUJul '20
DNBJun '20
RGUHSNov '19
RGUHSMay '19
MPMSU2018
MUHSSummer '18
RGUHSNov '16
MPMSU2015
MUHSSummer '15
MPMSU2014
MUHSSummer '14
RGUHSMay '11
RGUHSMay '11
MPMSU2007
MPMSU2005
MPMSU1995
Definition, etymology & terminology
- Definition — a placebo is any component of therapy without specific biological activity for the condition being treated — not just a sugar pill but any inert vehicle for treatment by suggestion; KDT's exam phrasing is "an inert substance given in the garb of a medicine" that works by psychodynamic, not pharmacodynamic, means and often produces responses equivalent to the active drug.
- Etymology — Latin placebo = "I shall please"; the patient responds to the whole therapeutic setting, and the effect largely depends on the physician–patient relationship — a placebo medicine is a vehicle for 'cure' by suggestion, surprisingly often successful, if only temporarily.
- Placebo effect vs response — the placebo effect is the favourable psychological/physiological response to the act of medication itself rather than to any pharmacological action; the placebo response (G&G) may involve objective physiologic and biochemical changes as well as changes in subjective complaints.
- Nocebo — Latin nocebo = "I shall injure" — the converse of placebo, a negative psychodynamic response from a pessimistic attitude or loss of faith in the medication; it can oppose the therapeutic effect of active medication and is the standard term for placebo-associated adverse events (stomach upset, insomnia, sedation).
- All treatments carry a placebo component — physiotherapy, psychotherapy, surgery, even entering a patient into a trial and the personality of the doctor all carry a placebo element — but it is most easily investigated with drugs, because an active drug and an inert dummy can be made to appear identical for controlled comparison.
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Placebo
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