Results 171 to 180 of about 9,405 (220)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.

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 ...
openaire   +2 more sources

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 ...
openaire   +1 more source

The nocebo effect: A clinicians guide

Australian & New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry, 2012
Objective: This paper aims to provide an overview on the nocebo effect, focusing on recognition — its phenomenology, at-risk demographic profiles, clinical situations and personality factors, as well as discriminating somatic symptoms in the general population from treatment-related adverse effects.
João, Data-Franco, Michael, Berk
openaire   +2 more sources

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 ...
openaire  

Placebo and Nocebo Effects

2016
Placebo refers to the positive expectation that a treatment will help patients, and nocebo refers to adverse events related to patient’s negative expectations that a medical treatment will likely harm instead of healing. Both conditions illustrate the power of human brain and are strongly related to treatment outcome and adherence. Placebos and nocebos
Dimos D. Mitsikostas   +1 more
openaire   +1 more source

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 ...
openaire   +1 more source

The Nocebo Effect of Informed Consent

Bioethics, 2012
ABSTRACTThe nocebo effect, the mirror‐phenomenon to the placebo effect, is when the expectation of a negative outcome precipitates the corresponding symptom or leads to its exacerbation. One of the basic ethical duties in health care is to obtain informed consent from patients before treatment; however, the disclosure of information regarding potential
openaire   +2 more sources

Ulysses Contracts and the Nocebo Effect

The American Journal of Bioethics, 2012
The nocebo effect is both recursive and detrimental. It is recursive because it is self-fulfilling; it is detrimental because the impact is either harmful or undesirable.
openaire   +2 more sources

Placebo and Nocebo Effect

2014
A single definition of placebo is difficult. It is an intervention with no beneficial or therapeutic effect. Placebo response is any useful effect that cannot be attributed to the specific intended effect.
openaire   +1 more source

[Biosimilars and the nocebo effect].

Zeitschrift fur Rheumatologie, 2020
Biosimilars have been approved for use in Germany for many years and in the meantime also in rheumatology but only a few years ago. Biosimilars, which are biotechnologically manufactured products the same as reference biologicals, have actually now achieved a substantial proportion of the market in some regions but there are still doubters among ...
J, Braun   +6 more
openaire   +1 more source

Home - About - Disclaimer - Privacy