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ordinaryperson | 5 years ago

So cynical. I hope you're never in debilitating physical pain, only to have other people dismiss the effect of surgical intervention as a figment of your imagination.

It's not just about the sample size, I could get into the anatomy of my injuries but I don't want to divulge more of my medical privacy than I already have.

Suffice to say that when certain things are torn or detached surgical intervention is often the only way to re-attach or restore function to the affected joints. No mount of wishing it way mentally is going to change that.

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medlyyy|5 years ago

I think you're misunderstanding what "placebo effect" means. Colloquially it's applied to things that "do nothing," or have only a psychological impact but in reality the placebo effect continues to work even when people are fully aware that what they are taking is a placebo:

1. https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/jebm.12251 2. https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S152659001...

So the situation is more complicated than "figment of your imagination" or "wishing it away" (this doesn't work and isn't what placebo is referring to by they way - you have to actually receive a treatment even if that treatment has no direct effect) - it's clearly a real biological effect. Just the mechanisms are more obscure.

There's obviously a limit to what placebo effects can accomplish even if they can be positive, and I think the goal & point made is that because surgery is inherently risky, there should be an expectation of benefit over and above what can be accomplished with risk-free methods; ie., that surgeries which are shown to be only as effective as placebo should probably not be performed.

fooblat|5 years ago

I find those studies problematic. In the ones I read from your links, the doctor says something along the lines of "this pill is a placebo. It means it has no active ingredients. However, the 'placebo effect' is known to be powerful and if you take these pills as instructed they can still help you..."

As I understand it, a big part of the placebo effect is setting the expectation that the treatment will help. And it is only known to help in subjective conditions, such as pain.

I expect we might see different results if the doctor said something more like "This pill has no active ingredients and does nothing. We are giving it to you to see if you will imagine that it worked anyway."

Kissing a child's scraped knee is not a treatment but, it along with a reassuring "there, all better!" works wonders for the child anyway. They are comforted and relived.

tsimionescu|5 years ago

There is as yet no reason to think placebo is a 'real' effect, except for cases of subjective symptoms or body functions under conscious control (directly like breathing rhythm or indirectly like pulse).

For all other cases, like infections or tumors, the placebo effect seems to only be a measure of poorly understood differences in natural processes, which can cause spontaneous remissions at unpredictable rates.

The act of giving fake medicine to the control group has no direct effect on the people taking it - the idealized study results would almost certainly be the same if the control group received no medication at all. However, the reported data would be much harder to trust, as it would be obvious for the data collectors and pacients which group they are part of, making it trivial for them to misreport data and symptoms to influence the result in the direction they desire (whether consciously or not).

That is the real reason for the double blind study design in most tteatments - fear of fake data, not any mysterious healing/detrimental effects from the act of taking sugar pills.

jartelt|5 years ago

Regarding something like your rotator cup issue: it's not simply a question of doing no treatment (you just having a painful shoulder) vs. having your surgery. It is more does having your rotator cup surgery and associated post-op rehab statistically work better than having a "sham" placebo surgery and doing the associated post-op rehab. People can begin to feel better after having placebo surgeries where nothing was actually repaired.

Below is a study seeking to measure the efficacy of rotator cuff surgeries. The point is that even this surgery, which I think you had performed and were happy with, does not necessarily have clear, proven efficacy vs. a placebo surgery.

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6530362/

inakarmacoma|5 years ago

The improvements from okeechobee Placebo are demonstrably real. We don't always understand why/how, but... the sugar pill, for example, in combination with your body and mind are very literally resulting in improvement. Placebo does not mean fake nor tricked. The efficacy is absolutely fascinating, though.

tsimionescu|5 years ago

That is only true for subjective symptoms like pain or anxiety, or for objective symptoms where there is some measure of conscious control, like blood pressure or pulse.

But there is no proof whatsoever of any kind of real placebo effect for body functions with no direct conscious control, such as immune function improvements from placebos.

OJFord|5 years ago

Please allow me to reiterate: who cares how, it worked!

If I ever suffer debilitating physical pain, as I'm sorry you did and I hope I do not, the only thing I shall care about is that it stops.

Please understand that I'm not advocating for an end to the surgery that spared you that, whatever the means by which it did so.

Siira|5 years ago

I’ve seen debilitating physical pain gone by “meditation.” I myself have had pain in my chest and throat out of anxiety. Pain is ultimately a perception the brain makes, not a physical attribute.