• @[email protected]
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    1069 months ago

    The funny thing is that the “extra strength” placebos likely have a better chance of working. The more elaborate and involved the placebo is, the greater the chance of it actually working even if you know it is a placebo. Our minds are weird. As always, I’m too lazy to look up the actual study so I don’t know if it was a quality study or not.

    • @Aceticon
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      159 months ago

      Somebody from Behavioural Economics has actually shown a nocebo effect for something with genuine positive health effects when people tought it was an ultra cheap version.

      The story of that is in one of the Freakonomics books.

    • @[email protected]
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      139 months ago

      This reminded me of an episode of Mind Field, which shows significant improvent in cases of ADHD, Migraines, and a skin picking disorder in kids just through the placebo effect.

      They use elaborate set ups and suggestions like a turned off MRI machine, fake nurses and doctors in lab coats, etc. And the kids are actually told, that it’s their brain doing the healing, not the machine.

    • @[email protected]
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      59 months ago

      I believe it’s red placebos that are better at helping with pain.

      The brain is a fucky old thing.

      • @[email protected]
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        59 months ago

        It’s been a while since I looked at this, but different color pills “work” better for different ailments. Also the size and numbers of pills effect results as well. Two pills are “stronger” than one, bigger pills over smaller as well.

  • Smuuthbrane
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    699 months ago

    I only use brand name placebos. Generic doesn’t work for me.

  • Queen HawlSera
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    399 months ago

    People wanna tell me there’s no such thing as magic in a world where The Placebo Effect exists. Bro’s got a low level healing spell that grows stronger the more he believes it works.

    • @pyre
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      39 months ago

      they work even when you know they’re placebos. now that’s magic.

    • @[email protected]
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      19 months ago

      I agree. However, to me, something feels wrong about companies making money selling a product to people with the promise that they work when they don’t actually do anything in and of themselves. It’s false advertising plus taking money out of people’s pockets.

    • @Aceticon
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      59 months ago

      Take too much of a placebo and you might end up with a nocebo side-effect.

  • @AeonFelis
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    99 months ago

    I only use homeopathic placebos.

  • @Marcbmann
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    59 months ago

    Ah, Zicam. I’ll never understand how shit like that is allowed to make claims

  • @Sam_Bass
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    49 months ago

    Its a multibillion dollar industry