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Nonspecific medication side effects and the nocebo phenomenon. (Special Communication)

Authors :
Barsky, Arthur J.
Saintfort, Ralph
Rogers, Malcolm P.
Borus, Jonathan F.
Source :
JAMA, The Journal of the American Medical Association. Feb 6, 2002, Vol. 287 Issue 5, p622, 6 p.
Publication Year :
2002

Abstract

Many patients may experience side effects from taking a drug that are not actually caused by the drug. This is clear from studies that include a placebo, or inactive substance. Many patients in placebo groups develop side effects, possibly because they believe they are taking a drug and expect to have a reaction to it.<br />Patients taking active medications frequently experience adverse, nonspecific side effects that are not a direct result of the specific pharmacological action of the drug. Although this phenomenon is common, distressing, and costly, it is rarely studied and poorly understood. The nocebo phenomenon, in which placebos produce adverse side effects, offers some insight into nonspecific side effect reporting. We performed a focused review of the literature, which identified several factors that appear to be associated with the nocebo phenomenon and/or reporting of nonspecific side effects while taking active medication: the patient's expectations of adverse effects at the outset of treatment; a process of conditioning in which the patient learns from prior experiences to associate medication-taking with somatic symptoms; certain psychological characteristics such as anxiety, depression, and the tendency to somatize; and situational and contextual factors. Physicians and other health care personnel can attempt to a meliorate nonspecific side effects to active medications by identifying in advance those patients most at risk for developing them and by using a collaborative relationship with the patient to explain and help the patient to understand and tolerate these bothersome but nonharmful symptoms.

Details

ISSN :
00987484
Volume :
287
Issue :
5
Database :
Gale General OneFile
Journal :
JAMA, The Journal of the American Medical Association
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsgcl.82651636