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by ordinaryperson
2005 days ago
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So cynical. I hope you're never in debilitating physical pain, only to have other people dismiss the effect of surgical intervention as a figment of your imagination. It's not just about the sample size, I could get into the anatomy of my injuries but I don't want to divulge more of my medical privacy than I already have. Suffice to say that when certain things are torn or detached surgical intervention is often the only way to re-attach or restore function to the affected joints. No mount of wishing it way mentally is going to change that. |
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1. https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/jebm.12251 2. https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S152659001...
So the situation is more complicated than "figment of your imagination" or "wishing it away" (this doesn't work and isn't what placebo is referring to by they way - you have to actually receive a treatment even if that treatment has no direct effect) - it's clearly a real biological effect. Just the mechanisms are more obscure.
There's obviously a limit to what placebo effects can accomplish even if they can be positive, and I think the goal & point made is that because surgery is inherently risky, there should be an expectation of benefit over and above what can be accomplished with risk-free methods; ie., that surgeries which are shown to be only as effective as placebo should probably not be performed.