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Placebo and Nocebo Effects

New England Journal of Medicine, 2020
Placebo and Nocebo Effects Placebo and nocebo effects (effects of patients’ positive and negative expectations) are powerful and pervasive in clinical practice.
Luana, Colloca, Arthur J, Barsky
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Nocebo in headache

Current Opinion in Neurology, 2016
This article addresses nocebo in headache. Nocebo is the antipode of placebo and refers to adverse events a person manifests after receiving placebo.In randomized trials for migraine prevention meta-analyses revealed that eight out of 20 patients treated with placebo experienced any adverse event.
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Placebo/nocebo

Den norske tannlegeforenings Tidende, 2015
English summary Placebo/nocebo 32-8. Placebo was originally defined as an inactive medication giving a positive effect, whereas nocebo gives the opposite result. Both situations are based on expectations, of positive or negative kind.
Nils Jacobsen, Arne Hensten
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Nocebo and lessebo effects

2020
The power of placebos is commonly associated with the placebo effect. In contrast, detrimental effects related to the use of a placebo are little studied and less well recognized. This chapter covers the nocebo and lessebo effects defined, respectively, as expectation of harm in the form of adverse events in a placebo arm and reduction of therapeutic ...
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The nocebo effect in psychotherapy

Current Opinion in Psychology
The nocebo effect, negative treatment outcomes arising from patient expectations, therapeutic context, or clinician communication, plays a possibly significant yet often underestimated role in psychotherapy. Drawing on recent empirical and theoretical contributions, possible mechanisms how nocebo effects occur and can be attenuated in psychotherapeutic
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The nocebo effect

BMJ, 2013
Researchers investigated whether a sham device (validated sham acupuncture needle) and an inert pill exerted a similar placebo effect in patients with persistent arm pain. A single blind randomised controlled trial study design was used. The study was created from the placebo run-in periods for two randomised placebo controlled trials nested within a ...
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Placebo and nocebo

2008
The placebo effect has shifted from being a nuisance in clinical research to a promising model of an emerging neuroscience of mind–brain–body interactions. In fact, the interest in and the success of placebo research resides in its multifaceted meaning, which involves key issues in modern science – from neurobiology to philosophy, from ethics to social
Luana Colloca   +2 more
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Nocebo effect

2021
Nocebo effect is defined as the occurrence of adverse effects to a therapeutic intervention because the patient expects them to develop. It is more often in patients with a past negative experience. As skin lesions are visible, often have unpredictable course, frequent relapses and due they chronicity, dermatology patients are more susceptible to ...
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The Nocebo Effect.

SAAD digest, 2016
A growing body of evidence is emerging for a phenomenon known as the nocebo effect. This is when a person is conditioned to expect a negative response, or to anticipate negative effects from an experience. These findings highlight the importantance of effective communication with patients and the influence that good anxiety and pain management control ...
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