April 2006
Intent, healing and the bodymind ‑‑ beyond the placebo
by Dr. Christopher Kent
Ask a person to define
placebo, and most will say "a dummy or sugar pill." Placebos are often used
in research studies to compare results with a "real" drug. Yet research has
shown that there is far more to the placebo than a tool to "fool" patients
into believing they are receiving an effective treatment. An understanding
of the placebo effect goes to the very heart of understanding our
self‑healing capabilities.
The American Heritage
Dictionary of the English Language [1] defines the placebo effect as "The
beneficial effect in a patient following a particular treatment that arises
from the patient's expectations concerning the treatment rather than from
the treatment itself."
Authors at the Mayo
Clinic [2] have described some important aspects of the placebo effect,
suggesting that it is a means of harnessing your mind's power to heal:
*** A person with
positive expectations may experience the placebo effect more than someone
with lower expectations.
*** A person whose
doctor is supportive and positive may experience more benefit from a placebo
than someone who doesn't have that relationship.
Other researchers [3]
have noted that "The study of the placebo effect, at its core, is the study
of how the context of beliefs and values shape brain processes related to
perception and emotion and, ultimately, mental and physical health." The
placebo effect is not "imagined" or "phony." It has been shown that placebos
actually affect the function of the brain in ways very similar to "active"
treatments. [4]
Some studies that
demonstrate the power of the placebo effect have shown:
*** Approximately 80%
of the response to antidepressant medication was duplicated in placebo
control groups. [5]
*** Patients with mild
to moderate elevated blood pressure had a placebo response rate similar to
that achieved with medication. [6,7]
*** Significant
placebo effects have been observed in the fields of pain and analgesia,
immune system function, and motor disorders. [3]
Science has learned
that, "Expectation releases substances, molecules, in your brain, that
ultimately change your experience...The mind, it seems, may play a critical
role in treating diseases. And its services come free of charge, with no
co‑payment or deductible. Getting a person to boost their own machinery to
improve health ‑‑ that's something that medicine needs to know." [4]
Doctors and other
practitioners who express empathy, connect with the emotional needs of their
patients, and communicate positive intent on a conscious and subconscious
level are master healers. They understand that the real healer is the
bodymind itself, and have developed the ability to release that potential in
their patients.
References
1. "The American
Heritage Dictionary of the English Language," Fourth Edition , (2004).
Published by Houghton Mifflin Company.
2. Placebo effect:
harnessing your mind's power to heal. Science Daily. 12/31/03.
3. Benedetti F, Mayberg
HS, Wager TD, et al: "Neurobiological mechanisms of the placebo effect."
The Journal of Neuroscience 2005;25(45):10390.
4. Guterman L: "Duping
the brain into healing the body." The Chronicle of Higher Education.
December 3, 2003.
5. Kirsch I, Moore TJ,
Scoboria A, Nkicholls SS: "The emperors new drugs: an analysis of
antidepressant medication data submitted to the U.S. Food and Drug
Administration." Prevention & Treatment 2002;5(1)23 [Article A].
6. Preston RA, Materson
BJ, Reda DJ, Williams DW: "Placebo‑associated blood pressure response and
adverse effects in the treatment of hypertension: observations from a
Department of Veterans Affairs Cooperative Study." Archives of Internal
Medicine 2000;160(10):1449.
7. http://www.mercola.com/2000/jun/10/placebo_bp.htm
(Dr. Christopher
Kent, president of the Council on Chiropractic Practice, is a 1973 graduate
of Palmer College
of Chiropractic. The WCA's "Chiropractic Researcher of the Year" in 1994,
and recipient of that honor from the ICA in 1991, he was also named ICA
"Chiropractor of the Year" in 1998. He is director of research and a
co‑founder of Chiropractic Leadership Alliance. An attorney as well as a
chiropractor, Dr. Kent is a member of the California bar. With Dr. Patrick
Gentempo, Jr., Dr. Kent produces a monthly audio series, "On Purpose,"
covering current events in science, politics and philosophy of vital
interest to the practicing chiropractor. For subscription information call
800‑892‑6463.)