2021
DOI: 10.1016/j.tics.2021.07.016
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A social affective neuroscience lens on placebo analgesia

Abstract: Pain is a fundamental experience that promotes survival. In humans, pain stands at the intersection of multiple health crises: chronic pain, the opioid epidemic, and health disparities. The study of placebo analgesia highlights how social, cognitive, and affective processes can directly shape pain, and identifies potential paths for mitigating these crises. This review examines recent progress in the study of placebo analgesia through affective science. It focuses on how placebo effects are shaped by expectati… Show more

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Cited by 35 publications
(35 citation statements)
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References 142 publications
(177 reference statements)
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“…Further research has shown that Black patients receive less information than White patients, ask fewer questions, and are less likely to participate in decision making when experiencing lower-quality communication ( Shen et al, 2018 ). Healthcare professionals have also been shown to hold false beliefs about biological differences between White and Black patients that correlate with their treatment decisions ( Hoffman et al, 2016 ; Atlas, 2021 ). A study assessing whether patient factors affected physicians’ underestimation of patient pain found that physicians are twice as likely to underestimate pain in Black patients ( Staton et al, 2007 ).…”
Section: The Clinical Encountermentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Further research has shown that Black patients receive less information than White patients, ask fewer questions, and are less likely to participate in decision making when experiencing lower-quality communication ( Shen et al, 2018 ). Healthcare professionals have also been shown to hold false beliefs about biological differences between White and Black patients that correlate with their treatment decisions ( Hoffman et al, 2016 ; Atlas, 2021 ). A study assessing whether patient factors affected physicians’ underestimation of patient pain found that physicians are twice as likely to underestimate pain in Black patients ( Staton et al, 2007 ).…”
Section: The Clinical Encountermentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In laboratory-based studies, subjects are exposed to an aversive stimulus (e.g., heat pain or electric shock) and then given an inert treatment (e.g., a saline infusion or inert cream) with the instruction to expect alleviation (i.e., “this will reduce your pain”) or worsening of the pain (i.e., “this will increase your pain”). Association between treatment and its effect can also be induced by conditioning through repeated pairing of a painful stimulus and a treatment to guide the experience of pain ( Atlas, 2021 ).…”
Section: Neurobiological and Physiological Correlates Of Placebo/nocebo And Discriminationmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Outcome expectancies also have strong effects relative to the active effects of psychotropic drugs (Rutherford and Roose 2013). In trials where subjective measures are the primary basis for outcome, outcome expectancies may particularly moderate therapeutic outcomes (Atlas 2021). Fillingim and Price (2005) concluded that, in placebo analgesia studies for example, outcome expectancies accounted for up to 81% of variance in post-treatment pain ratings.…”
Section: Expectancies In Psychotherapy and Pharmacology Researchmentioning
confidence: 99%