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so in a drug study showing no difference between inferior or superior

outcomes to a sugar pill does not matter?

 

 

 

400 29th St. Suite 419

Oakland Ca 94609

 

 

 

alonmarcus

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Hey Alon:

 

In answer to your question, which I am not sure is on the point I or the

following authors were making:

" So in a drug study showing no difference between inferior or superior outcomes

to a sugar pill does not matter? "

 

Is this extract from the abstract I reprinted earlier today (Kienle and Kiene

1997):

" False impressions of placebo effects can be produced in various ways.

Spontaneous improvement, fluctuation of symptoms, regression to the

mean, additional treatment, conditional switching of placebo treatment,

scaling bias, irrelevant response variables, answers of politeness,

experimental subordination, conditioned answers, neurotic or psychotic

misjudgment, psychosomatic phenomena, misquotation, etc. "

 

Also see Hróbjartsson and Gøtzsche 2001, Hróbjartsson and Gøtzsche 2007,

Hróbjartsson and Norup 2003.

 

From the Cochrane Library (Hróbjartsson and Gøtzsche 2004):

" There was no evidence that placebo interventions in general have clinically

important effects. A possible small effect on continuous patient-reported

outcomes, especially pain, could not be clearly distinguished from bias. "

 

 

Thoughts?

 

Hugo

 

 

________________________________

Hugo Ramiro

http://middlemedicine.wordpress.com

http://www.chinesemedicaltherapies.org

 

 

 

 

 

________________________________

alon marcus <alonmarcus

Chinese Medicine

Sunday, 2 November, 2008 20:09:03

Re:Placebo Effect

 

 

so in a drug study showing no difference between inferior or superior

outcomes to a sugar pill does not matter?

 

 

 

400 29th St. Suite 419

Oakland Ca 94609

 

 

www.integrativeheal thmedicine. com

alonmarcus (AT) wans (DOT) net

 

 

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Doesn't veterinary acupuncture effective eliminate any discussions about

placebo? Why not?

 

Also, has it not been considered that placebo itself is a scientific construct

that itself has shifting goal posts? In philosophy of science circles this

discussion has certainly been taken up.

 

y.c.

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Placebo = any positive healing effect that comes from within the person

(usually attributed to a belief or mental state, but not necessarily)

that can't be accounted for by modern biochemistry. Acupuncture is then

placebo.

 

Christopher Vedeler L.Ac.

Oasis Acupuncture

http://www.oasisacupuncture.com

9832 N. Hayden Rd.

Suite 215

Scottsdale, AZ 85258

Phone: (480) 991-3650

 

 

 

Chinese Medicine

Chinese Medicine On Behalf Of

Yangchu Higgins

Wednesday, November 05, 2008 8:42 AM

Chinese Medicine

Re: Placebo Effect

 

 

Doesn't veterinary acupuncture effective eliminate any discussions about

placebo? Why not?

 

Also, has it not been considered that placebo itself is a scientific

construct that itself has shifting goal posts? In philosophy of science

circles this discussion has certainly been taken up.

 

y.c.

 

 

 

 

---

 

Subscribe to the free online journal for TCM at Times

http://www.chinesemedicinetimes.com

 

Help build the world's largest online encyclopedia for Chinese medicine

and acupuncture, click,

http://www.chinesemedicinetimes.com/wiki/CMTpedia

 

 

and

adjust accordingly.

 

Messages are the property of the author. Any duplication outside the

group requires prior permission from the author.

 

Please consider the environment and only print this message if

absolutely necessary.

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Hi Christopher:

 

" Placebo = any positive healing effect that comes from within the person

(usually attributed to a belief or mental state, but not necessarily)

that can't be accounted for by modern biochemistry. Acupuncture is then

placebo. "

 

The way I've been seeing this recently is that the orthodoxy will use " placebo "

to group all medical systems, modalities and tools which do not fall under

biomedicine into one undifferentiated unit. This position will then be finally

and definitively labelled:

 

" placebo response = it's all in your head and mediated by endogenous opioid

release - there is no specific effect beyond this " .

 

" Placebo " , in this sense, would be deeply disempowering to CM and other similar

health professions, because, really, anyone could do it. All it takes is force

of personality.

 

I believe that this eventuality would spell a long-term regression of any

realistic understanding of what human health is.

 

As far as y.c.'s question regarding veterinary acupuncture - if all it took was

evidence, then we'd be fine. Unfortunately (or fortunately??) we are working

with human beings, who tend to have heavy biases and limited, lazy minds, no

matter how vigorous they believe themselves to be. It's a turf-war, it's a

power-struggle, and it's about ego. 200 years of modern science and I think that

it still takes an historian of science to see how deeply affected the scientific

institution is by bias, orthodoxy and assumption.

On the other hand, if we present well and congruently to the public, they will

back us, because I think most people are interested in what works, and have

little desire to spend most of their lives living in the steel cage of pure

rationality.

 

Hugo

 

 

________________________________

Hugo Ramiro

http://middlemedicine.wordpress.com

http://www.chinesemedicaltherapies.org

 

 

 

 

 

________________________________

Christopher Vedeler L.Ac. <vedeler

Chinese Medicine

Wednesday, 5 November, 2008 18:07:32

RE: Re: Placebo Effect

 

 

 

Christopher Vedeler L.Ac.

Oasis Acupuncture

http://www.oasisacu puncture. com

9832 N. Hayden Rd.

Suite 215

Scottsdale, AZ 85258

Phone: (480) 991-3650

 

 

Traditional_ Chinese_Medicine

[Traditional_ Chinese_Medicine ] On Behalf Of

Yangchu Higgins

Wednesday, November 05, 2008 8:42 AM

 

Re: Placebo Effect

 

Doesn't veterinary acupuncture effective eliminate any discussions about

placebo? Why not?

 

Also, has it not been considered that placebo itself is a scientific

construct that itself has shifting goal posts? In philosophy of science

circles this discussion has certainly been taken up.

 

y.c.

 

------------ --------- --------- ------

 

Subscribe to the free online journal for TCM at Times

http://www.chinesem edicinetimes. com

 

Help build the world's largest online encyclopedia for Chinese medicine

and acupuncture, click,

http://www.chinesem edicinetimes. com/wiki/ CMTpedia

 

 

http://groups. / group/Traditiona l_Chinese_ Medicine/ join and

adjust accordingly.

 

Messages are the property of the author. Any duplication outside the

group requires prior permission from the author.

 

Please consider the environment and only print this message if

absolutely necessary.

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There is no *placebo effect*. Effects observed in persons who have

been given inert sugar pill (or so-called sham treatment) never did

and never will occur in a vacuum without many other factors involved.

Even in-vitro experiments are not in total isolation from constantly

changing environmental variables. Many forms of radiant energy

invalidate the idea of impervious barriers.

 

Effort to pin down cause and effect in a human being leads me to

search for *requisite co-factors* amidst huge quantities of merely

incidental concomitants. It is only speculative, but there is nothing

to prove, since I only need a provisional / hypothetical

understanding. Like many interactions, it is an ongoing process,

making any patient encounter truly UNIQUE as I aim to facilitate a

favorable transition.

 

This is in reality un-repeatable, yet the only way that any science

can be considered replicable is through an implicit agreement to

ignore anything that is inconvenient to the rationale. (Imagine the

entire universe through all time as ONE pattern. Any similarity of

one moment to the next is just that, similar, not the same.)

 

I believe in evaluation / diagnosis because it is something that I can

point to pre and post to clarify some kind of results. Most people

really don't care *how* they got the results they want, only that they

do. I urge all to stop playing into the idiotic game of so-called

scientific evidence based research standards. The only claim that

matters is that YOU (as opposed to any specific nominal technique /

method) have a convincingly good probability of assisting YOUR

patients achieve the health goals they want.

 

How about a study of 50 drugs and surgery MD's vs. 50 multi-modality

LAc's, comparing FUNCTIONAL OUTCOMES and COSTS for patients selected

on the basis of all having a similar presenting chief complaint. That

would likely produce some VERY interesting data!

 

joe reid 11-06-08 www.jreidomd.blogspot.com

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That is called best practices and is an acceptable way to have a

study. The outcome however needs to be independently and objectively

evaluated.

 

 

 

400 29th St. Suite 419

Oakland Ca 94609

 

 

 

alonmarcus

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Pray tell, what constitutes " independently " and " objectively. " I'm sure that

the materialistically oriented acupuncturists have fully been equal in their

pursuit of " nocebo, " ya? This is when a prescribed medication does not respond

as it otherwise should. The parameters of independence and objectivity do not

accommodate such anomalies other than chalking it up for something " in the

patient's head. " Hmm. I dare venture that our medicine is a tad more

sophisticated.

 

I value the materialist acupuncturists for their building bridges for the more

" wo wo " types. But I feel that your discourse is hampered by perameters that

are already stacked against you. You've got to do better.

 

y.c.

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I was told, not sure how true it is, but there was a study in the Chicago

area (by an insurance related company) to compare a cohort of patients who

went to traditional MDs, chiropractors and acuncturists for the same

complaints. The results showed 60% cheaper, 60% more effective and 60%

greater patient satisfaction in the groups that went to chiropractors and

acupuncturists. For some reason they just kind of put that under the table.

I think more studies similar to that need to be done and widely known about.

What more could you want from a system of medicine - more effective, cheaper

and more satisfying?!

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Hi Joe:

 

Joe wrote:

" Most people

really don't care *how* they got the results they want, only that they

do. I urge all to stop playing into the idiotic game of so-called

scientific evidence based research standards. The only claim that

matters is that YOU (as opposed to any specific nominal technique /

method) have a convincingly good probability of assisting YOUR

patients achieve the health goals they want. "

 

 

oof. Powerful, thanks Joe.

 

Hugo

 

 

________________________________

Hugo Ramiro

http://middlemedicine.wordpress.com

http://www.chinesemedicaltherapies.org

 

 

 

 

 

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  • 1 year later...
Guest guest

Placebo Effect

==============

 

You hear a lot about " placebo effect " nowadays. Placebo refers to any medical

treatment that is inert. The placebo has long been used in research trials to

test the efficacy of a new health care treatment. Often, it is called as " dummy

treatment " .

 

The placebo effect is observable, and one can feel improvement in health not

attributable to treatment. This effect is believed by many people to be due to

the placebo itself in some mysterious way.

 

When I was a young school student, our family was poor, and all my brothers were

not able to buy shoes. We had to weave rice straw sandals by ourselves to

commute to school.

 

However, I had wart problems in my foot that hurts when scratched by the clog

thong of the sandals.

 

I tried to apply acid solutions as well as many other medical remedies, but the

wart never disappeared from my foot for more than three years.

 

One day, we had a trip to my mother's hometown. It was about 400 kilometers far

from Osaka to Mount Koya, and during that time of WWII there were no trains or

automobiles. We had to commute by walking on most of the ways.

 

On the way along the mountain, we saw a statue of Jizo (Ksitigarbha),

traditionally seen in Japan as the guardian deity of children:

http://www.pyroenergen.com/articles10/images/jizo-ksitigarbha.jpg

 

We have tens of thousands of Jizo statues in Japan, and they are commonly found

especially by roadsides and in graveyards. Some of them are also known as

Wart-Removing Jizo.

 

History tells that once upon a time, a religious and hard-working man had a lot

of warts on his body. He prayed to the Jizo every day and night. One day, he

dreamed that he should wash his body with water streaming beside Jizo, the

guardian deity. He, of course, followed the instruction given by the deity.

After three days, he noticed that his warts are disappearing one by one.

 

The story spread all over Japan, and today, there are thousands of Wart-Removing

Deity called Ibotori Jizo all over Japan.

 

I myself tried to get blessed water from Jizo, then, miraculously, my wart was

removed in just three days while I was with my grandparents in the deep mountain

province of Mount Koya.

 

This is the foot of the author, Mr. Takano, with a scar of wart remaining in the

middle just below the index toe:

http://www.pyroenergen.com/articles10/images/wart.jpg

 

Even in this modern age in medical science, the above practice has remained

widely in Japan. Scientifically, they say that it is really a placebo effect,

but no one denies its miraculous phenomena.

 

There are hundreds of techniques for placebo effect for various maladies.

Talisman, charms, and magical words, are also considered placebo, and there is

no scientific evidence to prove them. We could say that our brain wave may be

controlled spiritually, and very often they are also effective mysteriously as

healing tools.

 

All medical practices have started from placebo, and many have recognized them

as effective and genuine.

 

Simple suggestions or kind words to children including to some adults are

effective for the treatment of bed-wetting, allergies, asthma, metabolic

syndrome, and even diabetes and kidney diseases, according to some data

reported.

 

Try anything by yourself, if it does not harm physically or mentally. It may be

just like that of hypnotism and your sufferings may disappear miraculously and

mysteriously.

 

 

---------------------------

About the Author:

Junji Takano is a Japanese health researcher involved in investigating the cause

of many dreadful diseases. In 1968, he invented PYRO-ENERGEN, the first

electrostatic therapy device for electromedicine that effectively eradicates

viral diseases, cancer, and diseases of unknown cause.

Free newsletter: http://www.pyroenergen.com/newsletter.htm

---------------------------

 

Reprint Rights: You may reprint this article within your website, blog, or

newsletter as long as the entire article remains the same as well as the " About

the Author " box.

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