Kalliope
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
The Guardian: Long Covid is very far from 'all in the mind' - but psychology can still help us treat it by Carmine M Pariante
- Carmine M Pariante is professor of biological psychiatry at King’s College London and editor of the blog platform Inspire the Mind
Quote:
This point is particularly important in the context of CFS/ME and, more recently, long Covid. Offering lifestyle changes or psychotherapeutic approaches to these patients does not mean that their symptoms are “not real”. Medics routinely help cancer patients with these approaches every day, yet I never hear anyone accusing doctors of suggesting cancer is all in the mind.
There is also good evidence that all types of symptoms can be influenced by anticipation and beliefs, as has been demonstrated many times with the powerful placebo and “nocebo” effects. Being offered something believed to be positive (for example, an empty capsule that we believe to contain a medication) or negative (an empty capsule we believe to contain a toxin) will make our symptoms better (placebo) or, respectively, worse (nocebo). This is not snake oil for the gullible: these are biological effects based on measurable changes in the brain and the body, and can occur in everybody. This is why the standard evaluation of a novel treatment for any disorder – including the very real Covid infection – requires a comparison with a dummy treatment, so that our expectations, positive or negative, do not influence the results. This concept is particularly relevant in the context of the recent controversy around a Guardian article on this topic, and the response it has received.
- Carmine M Pariante is professor of biological psychiatry at King’s College London and editor of the blog platform Inspire the Mind
Quote:
This point is particularly important in the context of CFS/ME and, more recently, long Covid. Offering lifestyle changes or psychotherapeutic approaches to these patients does not mean that their symptoms are “not real”. Medics routinely help cancer patients with these approaches every day, yet I never hear anyone accusing doctors of suggesting cancer is all in the mind.
There is also good evidence that all types of symptoms can be influenced by anticipation and beliefs, as has been demonstrated many times with the powerful placebo and “nocebo” effects. Being offered something believed to be positive (for example, an empty capsule that we believe to contain a medication) or negative (an empty capsule we believe to contain a toxin) will make our symptoms better (placebo) or, respectively, worse (nocebo). This is not snake oil for the gullible: these are biological effects based on measurable changes in the brain and the body, and can occur in everybody. This is why the standard evaluation of a novel treatment for any disorder – including the very real Covid infection – requires a comparison with a dummy treatment, so that our expectations, positive or negative, do not influence the results. This concept is particularly relevant in the context of the recent controversy around a Guardian article on this topic, and the response it has received.