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The '''placebo effect''' is the well-known lessening of pain and other symptoms when a patient is given an inert substance instead of told that he is getting normal medicine.<ref>a tendency Scientists generally agree that for a beneficial the placebo effect to occur if a person is expecting , the subject must believe that a he is given effective treatment will and that it must be therapeuticsuggested to him that the treatment is effective. The question of how and why placebo responses are generated is still a matter of debate. [http://www.socyberty.com/Psychology/The-Power-of-the-Placebo-Effect.71494 The Power of the Placebo Effect]</ref> but actually given an [[inert substance]],<ref>A placebo is a neutral treatment (such as an inactive pill) that may nevertheless promote healing because of the hope and confidence placed in it. [http://www.cox-associates.co.uk/glossary/technical.phpCox Associates] - glossary of psychological terms</ref> such as sugar pills.It can occur when exploratory surgery is conducted, too. For example, a tension headache will frequently disappear if the patient believes they are being given an analgesic.<ref>Cephalalgia Volume 23 Issue 1 [http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/journal/118883656/abstract?CRETRY=1&SRETRY=0Cephalalgia Volume 23 Issue 1]</ref> Researchers generally believe that its effect is due entirely to the patient's [[expectation]].
==Example of Drug vs Placebo in Headache Pain Management==
*Two hours after treatment of an in-progress moderate or severe headache, 49% of patients given 100 mg of sumatriptan reported no or mild pain, a significantly greater response rate than the 38% among the placebo group. At 4 hours, the response rate was 64% with sumatriptan and 45% with placebo.<ref>Jancin, Bruce. [http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_hb4345/is_/ai_n29117915"For tension headache, 100 mg of sumatriptan far exceeds placebo".]Clinical Psychiatry News. August, 2004. via FindArticles.com</ref>
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