I apologize if my phrasing was unclear. I was stating real outcome, meaning the real result as anticipated by the patient. The pain example was perfect for this. But it would also include situations where you can measure a real result
But the measurement can be corrupted by many things. Look how easy it is to create false memories, it would be easy to convince someone it was worse before, and to it unintentionaly if you where not ridgidly controling for it.
A percieved improvement does not nessacarily mean a real improvement, as you can mess with peoples memory and perception quite easily even if you don't mean to.
I now understand that you use palcebo as a pseudonym for experimental bias. Fine. If that is an easier definition for you, great.
No I am saying that procedural bais can not be seperated from the effect that is called the placebo effect.
Don't need to. It was an example. But I would guess it would be easy to do. Just like increased heart rate, blood pressure. or any measurable physiological parameter that can be varied by metal state.
Yes, hence white coat hypertension, but then again those can be effected by so many things. For example, you come into my office the first time and are nervious this raises your blood pressure, as you continue to show up regularly for monitoring you become less nervious and more at ease, this lowers the blood pressure that I measure. We both atribute this change to the drug I am testing on you, and it turns out you got the placebo.
There was no placebo effect in this whole thing as your higher blood pressure at the start opposed to the end was entirely an artifact of the experiment and not a real change in your average blood pressure. There was no placebo effect but my data shows one.
So we continue you on your placebo because it did you so much good, when all that changed is you got over you white coat syndrome.
I never stated everything can be measured so easily. I was just contridicting your statement that it's difficult to differentiate observed outcomes and real ones. There are many cases where placebo has actual outcomes that are easy to measure and don't need to take the patient's word for it.
And please show how many of those can not be becuase of other artifacts of the trial process?
I am not saying that there is no such changes, just that it is almost impossible to say if there was any sort of psychosymatic improvement vs other artifacts of the experimental procedure. So it is hard to say if something was what you are calling the placebo effect or was an error in measurement systemic to the experiment. One is an improvement the other is no change, but you can not tell them apart.
I don't follow homeopathic research or studies at all. I'll assume it's poor experiments and observer bias. As for the controls in animal studies. You'll often give a fake treatment to an animal as control, to control for effects as a result of handling, the carrier vehicle that the drug is in, or surgical procedures. These controls are called the "shams" animals. Not placebos.
Then they are only single blind studies as by the way you are describing it they are doing nothing to control for observer bias.
Yup, that's why you run controls. But I don't understand why you focus on observed change as not being change. Maybe i'm an empiricist, but if you measured something is differerent, then something is different. Maybe the probe is bad, instruments are wrongly set, maybe the patient's frame of mind is different, maybe buffers are spoiled. But if you measure a change, then a change exists. It's your job as a scientist to evaluate what the cause is for that change and prove it through controls and proper experimental design.
Yes, but you can not properly control to test a placebo as you can not remove observer bias in such situations. So any study that conclusively showed your definition of the placebo effect would still have all that bais on controled for.
Yes, the pill (which does nothing pharmacologically) that a is given patient but is told it will is a placebo. But that does not control for the bias the doctor may place into the study and that bias (which you include in the placebo effect) is not at all explained or substatiated by this definition.
And you are not properly removing all bais to see if it has any effect. You might be partialy controling for some observer bias but that would still not show that there was a real effect from the placebo.