placebo

listen to the pronunciation of placebo
Englisch - Türkisch
(Tıp) İlaç olarak verilen tesirsiz madde
yatıştırıcı bir ilaç
plasebo
{i} cenaze için yapılan akşam duasının açılış bölümü
hastaya ilâç diye verilen tesirsiz madde
{i} ilaçmış gibi verilen fonksiyonsuz madde
sahte ilaç
placebo effect
Plasebo farmakolojik olarak etkisiz, fakat telkine dayalı ve plasebo etkisi olarak da bilinen tedavi etkisini ortaya çıkaran bir tür ilaçtır. Vücuda ağız, burun veya enjeksiyon yolu ile verilebilir
placebo effect
(Pisikoloji, Ruhbilim) plasebo etkisi
placebo reactor
(Pisikoloji, Ruhbilim) plaseboya duyarlı
Englisch - Englisch
A dummy medicine containing no active ingredients; an inert treatment
Anything of no real benefit which nevertheless makes people feel better
An inactive substance with no medicinal effects that sometimes is used in research control groups
An inactive substance given to patients during drug testing to help assess effectiveness of medication Sometimes called a sugar pill
a substance of no medical value, an inactive substance
The first antiphon of the vespers for the dead
A prescription intended to humor or satisfy
(Roman Catholic Church) vespers of the office for the dead an innocuous or inert medication; given as a pacifier or to the control group in experiments on the efficacy of a drug
(Roman Catholic Church) vespers of the office for the dead
placebo, inert chemical substance used instead of a DRUG Placebos contain no medicine, but many patients show medical improvement when given a placebo or an ineffective treatment, a result known as the placebo effect Because of this, placebos are used as controls in drug testing to assure unbiased, reliable results In double-blind studies, both patient and doctor do not know whether a placebo or drug is administered A traditional placebo’s lack of side effects, however, often identifies it, so an older drug is sometimes used in drug tests instead of or in addition to a placebo 1
{i} tablet that contains no medication but has medical effects due to purely psychological reasons
An inactive substance or treatment given to satisfy a patient's expectation for treatment In some controlled trials (particularly investigations of drug treatments) placebos that are made to be indistinguishable by patients (and providers when possible) from the true intervention are given to the control group to be used as a comparative basis for determining the effect of the investigational treatment
An inactive substance administered to some study participants while others receive the agent under evaluation, to provide a basis for comparison of effects
an inert substance, i e a sugar pill; may be used in clinical trials to compare treatments
an innocuous or inert medication; given as a pacifier or to the control group in experiments on the efficacy of a drug
Inactive substance (such as a sugar pill) given to a patient either for its pleasing effect or as a control in experiments with an active drug
An inert substance, such as a sugar pill A placebo may be used in clinical trials to compare the effects of a given treatment against no treatment
A comparison substance against which experimental drugs are sometimes compared A placebo traditionally is an inactive substance resembling the experimental treatment In placebo-controlled trials, the control group takes placebo, while the test group takes the experimental drug Either group may receive a standard therapy in addition Many placebo-controlled trials are also double-blinded, which means that neither doctors nor patients know who is receiving drug or placebo
An inactive substance
A treatment condition used to control for the placebo effect where the treatment has no real effect on its own
An inactive substance containing no medicine, commonly referred to as a "sugar pill " It looks, smells, and tastes just like a drug being tested, and is used as a control in clinical trials
An inactive substance used as a control in an experiment or test to determine the effectiveness of a medical drug
An inactive substance or dummy treatment administered to a control group to compare its' effects with a real substance, drug or treatment
A placebo is an inactive substance which may look like medicine but contains no medicine - a "sugar pill" with no treatment value In some studies, the participants in a control group may be given a placebo
A substance or treatment that has no effect on human beings
Inactive substnace given to a patient either for its pleasing effect or as a control in experiments with an active drug
an inert non-drug substance that is given to the control group for comparison to a new experimental drug, usually in a randomized clinical trial
An inert substance such as a sugar pill, that is used as the "treatment" for one arm of a randomized trial, typically a double blind randomized trial In many cases where the treatment causes obvious side effects, a placebo cannot sensibly be used If there is no effective standard treatment, the control group may simply get no treatment, other than observation and measures to control symptoms as appropriate In this case, members of the control group will know that they are in the control group A very great myth about randomized cancer clinical trials is that the patients in one arm always get just a placebo The truth is that whenever there is a standard treatment the investigators think may be effective, the control group will at least get that treatment
– A chemically inert substance given in the guise of medicine for its psychologically suggestive effect; used in controlled clinical trials to determine whether improvement and side effects may reflect imagination or anticipation rather than actual power of a drug
An inert substance or intervention designed to appear the same as the experimental substance or intervention, but which has no physiological effect
A placebo is a substance with no effects that a doctor gives to a patient instead of a drug. Placebos are used when testing new drugs or sometimes when a patient has imagined their illness
an inert, inactive substance; a "sugar pill " Experimental therapies are compared with placebo in many clinical trials
The thing you give a study subject who has been assigned to the control group to make them think they are getting the treatment you are studying
placebo effect
The tendency of any medication or treatment, even an inert or ineffective one, to exhibit results simply because the recipient believes that it will work
placebo effects
plural form of placebo effect
placebo effect
The placebo effect is the fact that some patients' health improves after taking what they believe is an effective drug but which is in fact only a placebo. The beneficial effect in a patient following a particular treatment that arises from the patient's expectations concerning the treatment rather than from the treatment itself
placebo effect
any effect that seems to be a consequence of administering a placebo; the change is usually beneficial and is assumed result from the person's faith in the treatment or preconceptions about what the experimental drug was supposed to do; pharmacologists were the first to talk about placebo effects but now the idea has been generalized to many situations having nothing to do with drugs
active placebo
a placebo used in experimental tests of a drug that has noticeable side effects; "an active placebo mimics the side effects of the experimental drug
placeboes
plural of placebo
placebos
plural of placebo
placebo
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