What is it about?

Placebo effects spark more and more interest in both medicine and psychotherapy. Neurobiological findings have helped to understand underlying biochemical and neurological mechanisms although many questions remain to be answered. One common denominator of empirical findings regarding placebo effects across a wide range of clinical conditions (e.g., depression, Parkinson's disease, pain, neurological disorders) is the involvement of higher cognitive brain functions associated with the prefrontal cortex. It is meanwhile commonly accepted that placebo effects involve self-regulatory mechanisms whose role in mediating those effects have not been thoroughly investigated yet. We propose a theoretical framework which helps to identify relevant functional mechanisms. Drawing on psychological findings, we propose a mechanism by which placebo effects can be maximized in any type of medical and psychotherapeutic setting.

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Why is it important?

Rendering therapeutic interventions more effective by understanding how placebo effects are linked to psychological mechanisms.

Perspectives

Phenomenological explanations of unspecific effects have many shortcomings. In order to fully understand placebo effects science must widen the scope to functional accounts.

Dr Rainer Schneider
info@recon-freiburg.biz

Read the Original

This page is a summary of: Placebo forte: Ways to maximize unspecific treatment effects, Medical Hypotheses, June 2012, Elsevier,
DOI: 10.1016/j.mehy.2012.02.022.
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