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Placebos in 19th Century Medicine: A Quantitative Analysis of the BMJ

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2012

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BMJ Publishing Group Ltd.
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Raicek, Jacqueline E., Bradley H. Stone, and Ted Jack Kaptchuk. 2012. Placebos in 19th century medicine: A quantitative analysis of the BMJ. British Medical Journal 345:e8326.

Abstract

Objective: To provide the first quantitative data on the use of the term “placebo” in the 19th century. Design: Computer search of BMJ’s archival database from January 1840 (the first issue) through December 1899 for uses of the words “placebo(s).” Grounded theory was used to categorise the implications of uses of the term. Results: 71 citations contained the term “placebo(s).” Of these, 22 (31%) used the term to mean “no effect” or as a general pejorative term, 18 (25%) portrayed placebo treatment as permitting the unfolding of the natural history (the normal waxing and waning of illness), 14 (20%) described placebo as important to satisfy patients, 7 (10%) described it as fulfilling a physician’s performance role, 3 (4%) described its use to buy time, 3 (4%) described its use for financial gain, 2 (3%) used it in a manner similar to a placebo control, and only one implied that placebo could have a clinical effect. Only one citation mentioned telling the patient about his placebo treatment. Conclusion: Nineteenth century physicians had diverse a priori assumptions about placebos. These findings remind us that contemporary medicine needs to use rigorous science to separate fact from its own beliefs concerning the “provision of care.” As in previous generations, ethical issues concerning placebos continue to challenge medicine.

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