
Keith Petrie sets his health psychology students a challenge each year: create your own sham treatment, snake oil or pseudo-scientific therapy something you could theoretically charge big bucks for.
The University of Auckland professor sets the task after teaching his students about the placebo effect, the intriguing response that's baked into every drug or treatment study: when patients feel better even though they've been given a treatment that's not active, such as a sugar pill or saline solution. Placebo arms are a standard feature of drug studies; they're there to help determine the effectiveness or otherwise of the treatment being tested. There's always some degree of placebo response in drug studies. Do better than the placebo with your treatment, the thinking goes, and you're on to a winner.
Petrie's students tend to come up with creative ideas for their placebos along similar lines, he says. "They're often some sort of machine that does powerful things; or they're showing models to people of all the great benefits they'll get. And, of course, there's always megavitamin nutritional solutions for this and that."
It's a lighthearted exercise. But the placebo effect is the subject of serious research. Experts now believe it's more than just something to factor in and allow for in medical research. The placebo has potential to improve existing treatments and medications, and to teach us more about the mind-body connection when it comes to health and healing.
This story is from the July 29 - August 4 2023 edition of New Zealand Listener.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the July 29 - August 4 2023 edition of New Zealand Listener.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In

A hint of mermaids
Erin Palmisano's latest novel once again has food and romance at the heart of its well-plotted story.

Execution over innovation
Big and bold ideas are fine, but being the best beats being first.

Something's wrong with all of them
Engaging dissection of the 20th-century novel likely to send the reader in search for the book under discussion.

Cell warfare
A NZ trial using immunotherapy to beat a form of blood cancer is expanding after promising results – and it's hoped the 'gold standard' treatment will soon be widely available.

The virus that stole all the smells
In this edited extract from The Forgotten Sense, Jonas Olofsson traces the rise in anosmia as a result of Covid-19 infections.

When caring is ‘woke'
Some years ago, I sat in a small plane circling over Punta del Este in Uruguay. There was a delay and we sat in tense silence until we began our descent. Outside the tiny airport, a taxi ferried us past private Lear jets; these had been the cause of the hold-up. The driver pointed to two planes side by side. \"This one is a Trump plane.\"

Getting along swimmingly
The presenters of Endangered Species Aotearoa spend a fair bit of time on and in the water in the second season.

That clingy feeling
Our pets display the same types of attachment behaviours as we do, or so it seems.

The famous furred
A peaceful little spot in LA is the final resting place for the pets of some of Hollywood's biggest names.

Gone girl
She wandered in on Thursday morning looking very wan, and climbed into her bed. I sat on the edge and stroked her back.