scholarly journals Placebo and the New Physiology of the Doctor-Patient Relationship

2013 ◽  
Vol 93 (3) ◽  
pp. 1207-1246 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fabrizio Benedetti

Modern medicine has progressed in parallel with the advancement of biochemistry, anatomy, and physiology. By using the tools of modern medicine, the physician today can treat and prevent a number of diseases through pharmacology, genetics, and physical interventions. Besides this materia medica, the patient's mind, cognitions, and emotions play a central part as well in any therapeutic outcome, as investigated by disciplines such as psychoneuroendocrinoimmunology. This review describes recent findings that give scientific evidence to the old tenet that patients must be both cured and cared for. In fact, we are today in a good position to investigate complex psychological factors, like placebo effects and the doctor-patient relationship, by using a physiological and neuroscientific approach. These intricate psychological factors can be approached through biochemistry, anatomy, and physiology, thus eliminating the old dichotomy between biology and psychology. This is both a biomedical and a philosophical enterprise that is changing the way we approach and interpret medicine and human biology. In the first case, curing the disease only is not sufficient, and care of the patient is of tantamount importance. In the second case, the philosophical debate about the mind-body interaction can find some important answers in the study of placebo effects. Therefore, maybe paradoxically, the placebo effect and the doctor-patient relationship can be approached by using the same biochemical, cellular and physiological tools of the materia medica, which represents an epochal transition from general concepts such as suggestibility and power of mind to a true physiology of the doctor-patient interaction.

2020 ◽  
pp. 244-256
Author(s):  
Fabrizio Benedetti

This chapter seeks to emphasize the tight relationship between placebo effects and the doctor–patient relationship. The basic concept of defence mechanisms is that the body can protect itself from invaders, as the immune system does, and from damage, as the wound healing processes do. Complex cultural and social factors can also represent an important mechanism of defence. Within the context of body defence mechanisms and social interactions, the doctor–patient relationship represents a special case of beneficial social interaction which can be conceptualized as a true defence mechanism. The central point is that the system ‘patient–therapist’ is at work regardless of whether the therapy is effective or ineffective. Even if the therapy is totally ineffective, that is it has no specific effects, expectation of benefit (the placebo effect) may be sufficient to inhibit discomfort and eventually to influence the course of illness.


Gesnerus ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 76 (2) ◽  
pp. 225-246
Author(s):  
Tim Boon ◽  
Jean-Baptiste Gouyon

This article explores the contribution of television programmes to shaping the doctor-patient relationship in Britain in the Sixties and beyond. Our core proposition is that TV programmes on medicine ascribe a specific position as patients to viewers. This is what we call the ‘Inscribed Patient’. In this article we discuss a number of BBC programmes centred on medicine, from the 1958 ‘On Call to a Nation’; to the 1985 ‘A Prize Discovery’, to examine how television accompanied the development of desired patient behaviour during the transition to what was dubbed “Modern Medicine” in early 1970s Britain. To support our argument about the “Inscribed Patient”, we draw a comparison with natural history programmes from the early 1960s, which similarly prescribed specific agencies to viewers as potential participants in wildlife filmmaking. We conclude that a ‘patient position’ is inscribed in biomedical television programmes, which advance propositions to laypeople about how to submit themselves to medical expertise.


2001 ◽  
Vol 120 (5) ◽  
pp. A735-A735
Author(s):  
C STREETS ◽  
J PETERS ◽  
D BRUCE ◽  
P TSAI ◽  
N BALAJI ◽  
...  

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