unofan
Well-known member
. Placebos, by definition, are ineffective.
This is waaaay obvious.
No, placebos are by definition inert. The placebo effect (having effective healing properties despite being nothing more than a sugar pill) is 100% real.
. Placebos, by definition, are ineffective.
This is waaaay obvious.
Very, very wrong. Placebos are often startlingly more effective than doing nothing.
which is absolutely true. No medication will be approved if the placebo group does as well as the drug groupif a placebo works as well as the med, the med isn't effective
Yes, that part is true enough. But then he went on to say that placebos were ineffective “by definition,” which is where he took a 180 from Correctville.he said which is absolutely true. No medication will be approved if the placebo group does as well as the drug group
Yes, that part is true enough. But then he went on to say that placebos were ineffective “by definition,” which is where he took a 180 from Correctville.
Nope... You go ahead and Google how many sugar pills were ever prescribed as an effective treatment for anything, then get back to us on that.
Truly, some subjects might possibly will themselves to live somewhat longer simply by dint of a glimmer of hope, but placebos have never cured Jack, and the placebo-effect (even if it exists) isn't even remotely quantifiable.
Nope... You go ahead and Google how many sugar pills were ever prescribed as an effective treatment for anything, then get back to us on that.
Truly, some subjects might possibly will themselves to live somewhat longer simply by dint of a glimmer of hope, but placebos have never cured Jack, and the placebo-effect (even if it exists) isn't even remotely quantifiable.
Nope... You go ahead and Google how many sugar pills were ever prescribed as an effective treatment for anything, then get back to us on that.
We should probably take this over to the Medical thread, but....
Study Suggests Common Knee Surgery's Effect Is Purely Placebo - Scientific American
There you go - an actual, approved procedure found to be no more effective than a placebo surgery, and yet the procedure is still authorized. So much for "treatments have to be more effective than placebo or they won't be approved."
Actually, the only things I find more annoying than Fishy are those who call Wednesday "hump day" and of course, all Sandra Bullock movies
Did I ever say that an ineffective procedure should be approved? No. Ineffective procedures have been approved for decades, but that fact doesn't render them effective, and I never made that argument.
Do you follow? Good God.
My bad - it was BassAle who said, "No medication will be approved if the placebo group does as well as the drug group." If the placebo group and the drug group both have similar statistically significant improvements over doing nothing, then physicians *ought* to be prescribing placebos, in my opinion. Whatever works, baby.
Agree - if the drug and placebo are equally effective and both better than nothing, it is the placebo and not the drug that should be approved.what I said is correct. for FDA approval of a drug, the data has to show that it is more effective than the control group (placebo).
This makes sense to me - "effective" has to be carefully and precisely defined for each malady that we're trying to cure.I think the placebo affect is probably more pronounced in things like pain where people think they feel better, but it's not quantifiable. In a study of an asthma drug, some patients that got the placebo inhaler claimed to feel better, but did no better on quantitative breathing tests so it was simply a matter of how they perceived their breathing difficulty (which remained unchanged). Also things like blood pressure, where state of mind can have a clear affect on a quantitative measurement.
I didn't say to prescribe snake oil. The point of this line of research is that doctors can and should be honest about what they are prescribing - exactly the oppose of snake oil. "So, BassAle, research has shown that taking a vitamin pill every morning produces a statistically significant improvement for people with your condition, so I recommend that you follow that course of action."There are plenty of "over the counter" placebos (vitamins, nutritional supplements, homeopathic remedies). Doctor's don't need to prescribe snake oil.
Society is more and more an ally. It's a few high profile sh-tburgers and their bacteria-level fan boyz who are the haters, and they are dying off.
The homophobes' and transphobes' grandkids will spit on their graves. One reason they are so pathetic and hate-filled is they can sense already how irrelevant they are.
Nobody remembers segregationists and anti-Semites fondly. And that's what these cretins are the equivalent of.
They are cultural roadkill. Their disease will die with them.
Something tells me Republicans know they lost on the LGB aspect of things, so they will grunt, wail, and swing wildly towards the T until soundly defeated.
You need to get out and see America some more because I really don’t think the nation matches your ideas about it. The die-out of such hatred takes long than just a few generations.