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Tag: Placebo effect

Explore our medication guides and pharmacology articles within this category.

Understanding the Fake Drug Effect: The Placebo and Nocebo Phenomena

4 min read
It is estimated that around one-third of people in clinical trials experience symptom relief after taking a placebo, a phenomenon colloquially known as the fake drug effect. This remarkable mind-body connection shows how a person's expectation of improvement—or harm—can produce real physiological and psychological outcomes, even when no active medication is involved.

What Does the Placebo Pill Do? The Science Behind the 'Dummy' Tablet

6 min read
In clinical trials for major depression, the placebo effect accounts for a larger portion of the total benefit than the active drug itself, according to one meta-analysis. This startling fact highlights the powerful psychological and physiological phenomenon that explains exactly what does the placebo pill do and why it is so important for modern medicine.

What is the sugar pill thing? Unpacking Placebos in Medicine

4 min read
The placebo effect, often associated with a 'sugar pill,' can trigger measurable physiological changes in patients. But **what is the sugar pill thing**, and how is it used in modern medicine? In reality, 'sugar pills' are inert substances used in specific medical contexts, from research to routine medication packaging.

What is a placebo?: Unpacking the Science of Mind-Body Medicine

4 min read
According to one review, placebo treatments have produced improvement in symptoms for approximately 35% of patients in certain studies. But **what is a placebo** exactly? A placebo is an inactive substance or procedure that is designed to resemble an actual treatment but has no inherent therapeutic effect on its own.