Article Text
Abstract
Increasingly a focus of research as well as media reports and online forums, the use of placebos in clinical medicine extends beyond sugar pills and saline injections. Physician surveys conducted in various countries invariably report that placebos are routinely used clinically, impure placebos more frequently than the pure ones, and that physicians consider them to be of legitimate therapeutic value. Inconsistent study methodologies and physician conceptualisations of placebos may complicate the interpretation of survey data, but hardly negate the valuable insights these research findings provide. Because impure placebos are often not recognised as such by practitioners, they remain at the fringe of many placebo-related debates, hence quietly absent from discussions concerning policy and regulation. The apparent popularity of impure placebos used in clinical practice thus presents unresolved ethical concerns and should direct future discussion and research.
- Clinical ethics
- education for healthcare professionals
- healthcare for specific diseases/groups
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Footnotes
Linked article 100420.
Funding CSH is supported by a Canadian Institutes of Health Research Banting Postdoctoral Fellowship.
Competing interests None.
Provenance and peer review Commissioned; internally peer reviewed.
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