The Debate About Doctors Giving Out 'Fake' Medicines
Placebo treatments can make patients feel better. But is it ethical for doctors to prescribe them?
That pill your doctor just gave you? There's a decent chance that its ingredients are powerless to make you feel better—and that your doctor knows it. About half of U.S. doctors answering a recent national survey said that they sometimes prescribe placebo treatments to patients. That report, which appeared last month in the journal BMJ, has raised eyebrows and reignited a debate over whether such treatments have a place in medical practice. A January survey of Chicago-area physicians yielded similar findings.
Until around the 1960s, doctors routinely parceled out sugar pills, saline injections, and other inert substances that they presented to patients as real medicines. The placebos you might unknowingly get today are different: They're active agents such as over-the-counter pain medications, vitamins, antibiotics, and even sedatives. But, as with sugar pills, doctors have no evidence that these drugs can pharmacologically improve the patient's condition. Rather, the treatments are intended to promote positive patient expectations—otherwise known as the placebo effect.
While doctors may have the best intentions in mind, some experts worry that patients could interpret the use of placebos as deception—even if doctors are careful not to lie. "It's a fib by omission," says Frank Miller, an author of the BMJ study and a member of the senior faculty in the Department of Bioethics at the National Institutes of Health. "The healing relationship is heavily dependent on trust," says Robert Sade, a professor of surgery at the Medical University of South Carolina, who chaired the American Medical Association's Council on Ethical and Judicial Affairs in 2007. (The AMA issued a policy statement in 2006 advising doctors not to use placebos deceptively.) "Anything that undermines that trust is not good for patients."
Perhaps of more concern is that the medications that the BMJ survey found some doctors use as placebos, while generally benign, aren't without side effects. Over-the-counter painkillers carry some risk of ulcers; sedatives can be addictive and pose particular danger to the elderly; and misuse of antibiotics—which sometimes get doled out for colds despite having no power to kill the cold viruses, for example—can contribute to the development of antibiotic-resistant bacteria, a growing problem in the United States, says Howard Brody, director of the Institute for the Medical Humanities at the University of Texas Medical Branch in Galveston. In addition, using any kind of pill as a placebo is worrisome because it teaches patients that the right way to handle any symptom is by swallowing medication when some ailments might be improved by diet, exercise, and relaxation techniques, says Brody.
The powerful placebo. Other experts, however, see the widespread use of placebos as a virtue. Doctors' impulse to try to promote the placebo effect, if they think it might help and especially if they have little else to offer, is understandable, adds Jon Tilburt, an author of the BMJ study and an assistant professor of medicine at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn. "My belief is that this is an attempt of physicians to tap into the healing power of the mind," says John Hickner, coauthor of the Chicago survey and a professor of family medicine at the University of Chicago.
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Reader Comments
Placebo
I dont think that the doctors should be giving out fake medicine because what if the patient gets really sick form the disease and then they c0ould die and it would be on the doctor. The patient has the right to get the right treatment and the proper treatment. They dont need to be a test study fro the doctor to prove that the mind controls the type of pain the person is in. If the person wants the real thing then they deserve it. They should have a chance to get treated and have a chance to live and be alive for as long as possible. Yes sometimes it might work but what if the patient started to get worse and worse until it is to late and they die. Doctors need to think about what could happen and try to treat the patient for what they have. People could die from the doctors trying to save money and not perscribing the right thing and they could ruin the life of not just the patient but also the lives of their family.No one deserves to get the fake treatment and not get what they need to live so why should the doctors try to trick them into thinking that they are getting the real thing. No matter how much the drug costs the patient deserves to get the proper treatment. No one deserves to be tricked into thinking that the treatment costs to much and not get the medicine they need just because of money. Can you put a price on a life? I don't think you can and it isn't right to just to try and do a study on innocent people that need care. When you look at why people go to the hospital and you think why they are there what do you come up with? I think they are there so they can get treated and know that they aren't being cheated out of the healthcare they pay for. No matter what a doctor thinks about how pain is related to the mind the person still should have a choice on weather or not they want to get a fake drug or the real thing to help save and fix their lives. Every one that I know only goes to the hospital is when they really need to. So why should they not get the real treatment theat they came to get. If I ever found out that I was getting a fake drug i would go to the hospital and tell them to give me the real thing so that I can heal and have my health restored. This is what i think about the fake drugs that the doctors think will help the person. I would want the real treatment and not get cheated by the health system.
Placebo? Shmacebo.
I'll take a placebo over avoiding the doctor all together. Sometimes people need a push to take their health into their own hands, and this is one method. Not to mention the ever-growing list of antibiotic-resistant bacteria that are created everytime you down an unnecessary Z-Pack for a runny nose. Still, I don't think pharmaceutical companies deserve a dime of payment when people are issued a placebo, they get enough of our money as it is.
Pharmaceutical Companies
Is it ethical for pharmaceutical companies to spend more money on advertising their wares on television and elsewhere than to spend the same money on research?
At the rate we are going a cure or cures for Cancer will never be found, but we will all have witnessed hundreds of advertisements for Big Pharma wares.
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