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Review Randomized Controlled Trial
Choice Enhances Placebo Hypoalgesia More in Weaker Placebo Contexts: A Partial Reinforcement Study.
- Biya Tang, Evan Livesey, and Ben Colagiuri.
- School of Psychology, University of Sydney, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.
- J Pain. 2024 Jan 1; 25 (1): 202216202-216.
AbstractProviding individuals with choice over treatment has been found to enhance placebo hypoalgesia. However, this choice effect is not always present. The current study tested whether the strength of the placebo context influenced the effect of choice on placebo hypoalgesia. Using an established electrocutaneous pain paradigm, the choice effect was compared when placebo hypoalgesia was induced by Continuous Reinforcement (CRF) (strong placebo context) versus partial reinforcement (PRF) (weak placebo context). Healthy volunteers (N = 133) were randomized to receive either choice over treatment administration or no choice and then to placebo conditioning under either CRF (placebo always followed by surreptitious pain reduction during training) or PRF (placebo only followed by surreptitious pain reduction on half of the training trials). At the test, placebo hypoalgesia was greater and more resistant to extinction overall for those with choice. Importantly, however, the choice effect in enhancing the magnitude of placebo hypoalgesia was stronger after PRF than CRF. These results indicate that choice may have greater placebo-enhancing power in weaker placebo contexts. Therefore, choice may be a cheap and effective tool for improving clinical outcomes by facilitating placebo hypoalgesia when the existing treatment context is insufficient to produce placebo hypoalgesia itself. PERSPECTIVE: This study demonstrates that the enhancing effect of choice on placebo hypoalgesia is greater in a weaker placebo context. As such, offering choice could be an ethical way to effectively improve pain outcomes when placebo effects cannot be readily produced by the treatment context.Copyright © 2023 United States Association for the Study of Pain, Inc. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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