EDITORS' INTRODUCTION TO SPECIAL SECTION ON MEANING RESPONSE AND THE PLACEBO EFFECT
Academic Article
Publication Date:
2018
abstract:
OVER 200 YEARS AGO, DOCTORS' most effective tools were typically not found in their medical bags. Indeed, most treatments in the history of medicine have, until relatively recently, caused more harm than good. Prior to the biomedical revolution in the late 19th century, doctors' most reliable and effective instruments of healing were their skills of communication with patients and an aptitude for a positive and supportive bedside manner. Bearing out this portrait of medicine, Thomas Jefferson, writing in 1807, noted that "one of the most successful physicians I have ever known has assured me that he used more bread pills, drops of colored water, and powers of hickory ashes, than of all other medicines put together" (qtd. in De Craen et al. 1999, 511). Jefferson referred to these skills of beneficent persuasion as a "pious fraud." Exactly one hundred years later, in 1907, Mark Twain drew similar observations: "Physicians cure many patients with a bread pill; they know that where the disease is only a fancy, the patient's confidence in the doctor will make the bread pill effective."
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
MEDICINE
List of contributors:
Annoni, MARCO ANGELO MARIA
Published in: