greetings. i'm new; on slow dial-up, and lack the time to review the contents of this site. this is my apology if this matter has been discussed to death already.
perhaps many are aware of how big-pharm skewers double blinds in their favor, in respect to placebos. drugs like prozac beat the placebos partly because participants that show a high affinity for the placebo effect are eliminated prior to testing.
that's the small part of the problem.
in most double blind experiments designed to test the efficiacy of a wanna be drug, the participants are aware of the possibility (50/50) that they only got a sugar pill.
it wouldn't be ethical, but suppose a test was conducted wherein ALL participants believed that they got the 'happy' pill. even if they just got the placebo. wouldn't such a test eliminate the anti-placebo effect? wouldn't a much higher effectiveness be predictable?
perhaps what i'm suggesting seems nit-picky.
yet, playing in reverse, suppose an unscrupulous drug maker had realized this?
a worthless (hopefully harmless) drug that had made it past the testing, could be expected to out preform the placebo two-fold...which would be a major success.
does anyone know what i'm getting at?
imagine the placebo effect without the fore-knowledge that you likely got a placebo!
perhaps many are aware of how big-pharm skewers double blinds in their favor, in respect to placebos. drugs like prozac beat the placebos partly because participants that show a high affinity for the placebo effect are eliminated prior to testing.
that's the small part of the problem.
in most double blind experiments designed to test the efficiacy of a wanna be drug, the participants are aware of the possibility (50/50) that they only got a sugar pill.
it wouldn't be ethical, but suppose a test was conducted wherein ALL participants believed that they got the 'happy' pill. even if they just got the placebo. wouldn't such a test eliminate the anti-placebo effect? wouldn't a much higher effectiveness be predictable?
perhaps what i'm suggesting seems nit-picky.
yet, playing in reverse, suppose an unscrupulous drug maker had realized this?
a worthless (hopefully harmless) drug that had made it past the testing, could be expected to out preform the placebo two-fold...which would be a major success.
does anyone know what i'm getting at?
imagine the placebo effect without the fore-knowledge that you likely got a placebo!