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placebo
[pluh-see-boh, plah-chey-boh]
noun
plural
placebos, placeboesMedicine/Medical, Pharmacology.
a substance having no pharmacological effect but given merely to satisfy a patient who supposes it to be a medicine.
a substance having no pharmacological effect but administered as a control in testing experimentally or clinically the efficacy of a biologically active preparation.
Roman Catholic Church.the vespers of the office for the dead: so called from the initial word of the first antiphon, taken from Psalm 114:9 of the Vulgate.
placebo
/ əˈːəʊ /
noun
med an inactive substance or other sham form of therapy administered to a patient usually to compare its effects with those of a real drug or treatment, but sometimes for the psychological benefit to the patient through his believing he is receiving treatment See also control group placebo effect
something said or done to please or humour another
RC Church a traditional name for the vespers of the office for the dead
placebo
A substance containing no medication and prescribed to reinforce a patient's expectation of getting well or used as a control in a clinical research trial to determine the effectiveness of a potential new drug.
placebo
A substance containing no active drug, administered to a patient participating in a medical experiment as a control.
Word History and Origins
Origin of placebo1
Word History and Origins
Origin of placebo1
Example Sentences
With a demand that vaccine boosters be tested against placebos, RFK Jr. puts an old antivaccine claim at the forefront of government health policy.
Since taking office he has cut thousands of jobs in the health department and made plans to introduce placebo trials for all new vaccines.
As early as 1999, Irving Kirsch, a lecturer at Harvard, began to explore the role of the placebo effect in antidepressant studies, asserting that the placebo response to medication was greater than any pharmacological effect.
I suspect that none of the parents who volunteered for Jonas Salk’s polio vaccine trial were hoping their children were in the placebo group.
She says this new longer format is showing promising results, even without patients taking MDMA, with a success rate of 40% in the placebo group.
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