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Placebo acupuncture as a form of ritual touch healing: A neurophenomenological model

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2011

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Elsevier BV
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Kerr, Catherine E., Jessica R. Shaw, Lisa A. Conboy, John M. Kelley, Eric Jacobson, and Ted J. Kaptchuk. 2011. Placebo Acupuncture as a Form of Ritual Touch Healing: A Neurophenomenological Model. Consciousness and Cognition 20, no. 3: 784–791. doi:10.1016/j.concog.2010.12.009.

Abstract

Evidence that placebo acupuncture is an effective treatment for chronic pain presents a puzzle: how do placebo needles appearing to patients to penetrate the body, but instead sitting on the skin’s surface in the manner of a tactile stimulus, evoke a healing response? Previous accounts of ritual touch healing in which patients often described enhanced touch sensations (including warmth, tingling or flowing sensations) suggest an embodied healing mechanism. In this qualitative study, we asked a subset of patients in a randomized trial in irritable bowel syndrome to describe treatment experiences. Analysis focused on patients’ unprompted descriptions of any enhanced touch sensations (e.g., warmth, tingling) and any significance patients assigned to the sensations. We found in 5/6 cases, patients associated sensations including “warmth” and “tingling” with treatment efficacy. The conclusion offers a “neurophenomenological” account of the placebo effect by considering dynamic effects of attentional filtering on early sensory cortices, possibly underlying the phenomenology of placebo acupuncture.

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