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LEADER 00000cam  2200565 c 4500 
001    on1391329387 
003    OCoLC 
005    20231213113241.0 
006    m     o  d         
007    cr cn||||||||| 
008    230713s2023    nyu     ob    001 0 eng   
010      2023032623 
020    9780197645475|q(electronic bk.) 
020    019764547X|q(electronic bk.) 
020    9780197645451|q(epub) 
020    0197645453|q(epub) 
035    (OCoLC)1391329387 
040    DLC|beng|erda|epn|cDLC|dSTBDS|dOCLCO|dOCLCF|dYDX|dEBLCP
       |dOCLCO|dCUV 
042    pcc 
049    CKEA 
050 00 R733 
082 00 615.5|223/eng/20230727 
245 00 Placebo effects through the lens of translational research
       |c[edited by] Luana Colloca, Chamindi Seneviratne, Jason 
       Noel, Patricia D. Franklin 
264  1 New York, NY|bOxford University Press|c[2023] 
300    1 online resource|billustrations 
336    text|btxt|2rdacontent 
337    computer|bc|2rdamedia 
338    online resource|bcr|2rdacarrier 
504    Includes bibliographical references and index 
505 0  Cover -- Placebo Effects Through the Lens of Translational
       Research -- Copyright -- Contents -- Editor's Biography --
       Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- 1 Placebo effects: An 
       introduction -- 1.1 From placebo research to healing -- 
       1.2 Expectations: What do we know and where do we need to 
       go? -- 1.3 New translational opportunities for placebo 
       research -- 1.4 Cultural influences on placebo and nocebo 
       effects -- 2 Placebos and their predictability -- 2.1 
       Predictability of placebo responses and their clinical 
       implications -- 2.2 Molecular mechanisms of placebo 
       responses: From genes to pathways 
505 8  2.3 Dynamic regulation of genes in placebo responsiveness 
       in alcohol use disorder and co-​occurring pain -- 2.4 
       Placebos meet proteomics: Predicting and monitoring 
       placebo effects by plasma proteins -- 3 Placebos and 
       nocebos across conditions -- 3.1 The role of sleep 
       disturbance in endogenous pain modulation through 
       opioidergic, placebo, and positive affective mechanisms --
       3.2 Placebo effects in cough -- 3.3 Learned immune 
       responses: How associations affect immunity -- 3.4 Placebo
       effects in sports performance and exercise outcomes 
505 8  3.5 Nocebos in migraine: Implications for clinical 
       research and practice -- 3.6 Placebos, nocebos, and COVID-
       ​19: Society, science, and health care during the 
       pandemic -- 4 Placebos and nocebos in mental illnesses -- 
       4.1 A model of placebo responses in antidepressant 
       clinical trials -- 4.2 Placebo and nocebo effects in 
       depression: Implications for treatment and clinical trial 
       designs -- 4.3 Expectations and placebo effects in the 
       context of cognitive training -- 4.4 Why psychotherapy is 
       an open-​label placebo and open-​label placebos are 
       psychotherapy -- 5 Putting placebos into practice 
505 8  5.1 Placebo responses and effects: Processes, potential, 
       and ethical considerations in clinical care -- 5.2 Putting
       placebos into practice: From mechanisms to making patients
       better -- 5.3 Management of contextual factors to enhance 
       placebo and minimize nocebo effects in clinical practice -
       - 5.4 Placebo effects and research quality: What is good 
       evidence? -- 6 Current and future directions: Digital 
       health and health equity -- 6.1 Using the person-based 
       approach to implement placebo research into primary care 
505 8  6.2 Sharing online clinical notes with patients: 
       Implications for placebo and nocebo effects and racial 
       health equity -- 6.3 The rise of digital health and 
       digital medicine: How digital technologies will change or 
       affect placebo and nocebo effects -- 6.4 A glimpse of the 
       multiple applications of virtual reality: Analgesia, 
       embodiment and rehabilitation, interactive education, and 
       communication -- Index 
520    "The challenge of improving health outcomes for 
       individuals and populations remains daunting. Fortunately,
       collaboration among multiple disciplines accelerates our 
       appreciation of innate and external determinants of health
       for individuals and populations. Interprofessional 
       research, education and practice also strengthens our 
       capacity to design, disseminate, and deliver effective 
       strategies and policies to prevent and treat diseases, and
       improve health"--|cProvided by publisher 
588    Description based on online resource; title from PDF title
       page (Oxford Academic, viewed on November 16, 2023) 
590    Oxford University Press|bOxford University Press Open 
       Access Books 
650  0 Placebos (Medicine) 
650  7 Placebos (Medicine)|2fast|0(OCoLC)fst01732316 
650  7 Clinical & internal medicine|2thema 
650  7 Health and Wellbeing|2ukslc 
650 12 Placebo Effect|0(DNLM)D015990 
650 22 Placebos|xtherapeutic use|0(DNLM)D010919Q000627 
650 22 Translational Research, Biomedical|0(DNLM)D057170 
700 1  Colloca, Luana|eeditor 
700 1  Seneviratne, Chamindi|eeditor 
700 1  Noel, Jason|eeditor 
700 1  Franklin, Patricia D.|eeditor 
776 08 |iPrint version|tPlacebo effects through the lens of 
       translational research|dNew York, NY : Oxford University 
       Press, [2023]|z9780197645444|w(DLC)  2023032622
       |w(OCoLC)1378700689 
914    on1391329387 
994    C0|bCKE 
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