THE PLACEBO CURE
Reader's Digest US|September 2022
WHY DOCTORS ARE PRESCRIBING SUGAR PILLS INSTEAD OF THE REAL THING
Lia Grainger
THE PLACEBO CURE

MICHAEL WHARRAD HELD the envelope in his hands, certain of what the paper inside would tell him. A decade earlier, he'd been diagnosed with Parkinson's M disease. For a year, the former investment banker had participated in a drug trial at London's National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery.

Researchers were testing whether a medication approved to treat Type 2 diabetes could also treat Parkinson's symptoms. Every day, Wharrad had received a dose of either the drug or a placebo, but he never knew which.

During the trial, Wharrad thrived. His joints ached less, and he could get up from a chair more easily and take walks around the block. He also noticed that his memory seemed stronger. Friends and family commented on his obvious improvement. "My wife and I were convinced I was taking the drug," he says.

But at his end-of-trial meeting with one of the researchers who also didn't know whether or not Wharrad, then 72, had been on the drug-he was delivered a surprise. When he opened the envelope to find out what he'd been taking, he saw the word "placebo." "I was speechless," he says. "I had been feeling so much better."

A PLACEBO CAN be a sugar pill, a saline injection, or a glass of colored water-inert treatments that shouldn't produce a physiological response.

But they often do. Wharrad's case is not unusual. In fact, placebos are increasingly proving to be more powerful than active drugs in trials-and they may just be the key to reducing our dependence on medications.

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