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Methodological Issues of using Placebos in Interventions Based on Digital Technology
Author(s) -
William Farr,
Ian Male,
Dido Green,
Christopher Morris,
Heather Gage,
Sarah Bailey,
Sandra Speller,
Val Colville,
Mandy Jackson,
Stephen Bremner,
Anjum Memon
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
journal of mobile technology in medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1839-7808
DOI - 10.7309/jmtm.6.2.7
Subject(s) - psychological intervention , placebo , clinical trial , medicine , ideal (ethics) , health technology , health care , alternative medicine , psychology , psychiatry , philosophy , epistemology , pathology , economics , economic growth

Background/Aims: Use of placebo is the ideal for comparison in clinical trials to reduce biases. With digital technology being used more frequently in healthcare interventions, how do we determine the placebo effect where interventions exploit technology? If placebo in medicine is traditionally defined by a lack of pharmacological agents, how might we begin to move towards controlling for effects of digital technology?

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Method: This paper explores the traditional placebo effect and discusses its impact in healthcare contexts with digital technology with reference to a particular trial. Different meanings of placebo in the context of evaluating technology suggest new challenges and positive consequences.

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Results: Methodological considerations are discussed, which enabled the development of a placebo-controlled evaluation of a digital technology in healthcare and rehabilitation.

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Conclusion: Digital placebo was controlled in our trial by employing technology across all groups in the absence of evidence-based practice and shows how to control for unknown and hidden effects of technology.

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