How Does the Placebo Effect Work?

By: Jason Lee
Submitted: 2009-07-16 15:03:41

Should we take natural medicine in place of prescription medicine? There is a substantial range of thought out and about, a large portion of it heavily shifty. But there’s one notion we can be positive about: natural remedies are not meant to be used instead of prescription products. You are not going to get your diabetes cure from a natural remedy, so don’t be too naive about it.

Look at every natural medicine, and you will see that they are listed as ‘not medicine’ and not to be consumed as though they were. But that’s not really what we’re looking at here.

Explaining How a Placebo Works

In basically every medical test ever, subjects are provided with a placebo, or a sugar pill. They are not informed that the pill they are swallowing is having no effect. Without fail, observers observe that the placebo has a real effect.

This result has been tested dozens of times: it is one of the most important instances of the brain’s power over the human body; the skill of the mind to truly effect physical alterations.

Any Natural Remedy Can Work As A Placebo.

If a medical professional told you to eat a mango each day, because it would alleviate some sort of medical condition you had, you would likely do it. And quite possibly, your thoughts could convince your physical body (how this works is still for the most part a medical mystery) to treat that problem.

In sum, many natural remedies function on a similar foundation. They have not been fully evaluated in 100% proper scientific environments, so knowledge about the inherent properties in each natural cure comes from more broad studies. Claims are not made that this or that natural remedy will cure a disease or serious illness, but in sum, many properties of these natural products have been known to function such an area before.

And if it doesn’t happen 100% the way you want it, it doesn’t matter--you are taking something, in much the same mode as a placebo, that is affecting your problem. But the fact that there is a world of non-scientific, non-lab-proven knowledge behind this remedy (like, for example, that olive oil is generally excellent for your body), has a very big effect on how your head treats that pill-taking each day. When you take the product and think about how it functions, you are beginning a process inside your body that medical testing still does not comprehend.

Why Placebos Don’t Always Work

Taking a useless pill alone isn’t going to do anything. If it did, we’d all be taking them for many problems, especially when we don’t want to take an actual proper piece of medicine. We need a product that is halfway between an actual prescription drug (and its possible side effects) and a useless pill of sugar that does squat.

Natural cures fill this gap. They are not pharmaceuticals, they are just natural extracts, from vegetables and herbs and so on. They have some medical qualities, but the fact that they will cure your issue has not been scientifically proven. But that doesn’t matter.

What is the most important thing is that you are activating the sugar-pill effect, which is definitely stronger than you might expect. If you are weary about taking a prescription drug for a milder symptom of something (anxiety, for example), why not sample a natural remedy?