Nocebo
Pronunciation
- RP enPR: nÅsē′bÅ, IPA: /nəʊˈsiËbəʊ/
- GA enPR: nÅsē′bÅ, IPA: /noʊˈsiboÊŠ/
- Hyphenation: no + ce + bo
Origin
, the form of noceŠ("I harm"), by analogy with placebo. The word was coined by Walter P. Kennedy in a 1961 article entitled “The Nocebo Reaction†(see quotation).
Full definition of nocebo
Noun
nocebo
(plural nocebos)- (pharmacology, also attributive) A substance which a patient experiences as harmful due to a previous negative perception, but which is in fact pharmacologically (medicinally) inactive. from 1961
- 1961, Walter P. Kennedy, The Nocebo Reaction, It is somewhat surprising that little attention has been drawn to the existence of the contrary effect the placebo – which I may call the nocebo reaction.
- 25 April 2009, Stuart Blackman, Why health warnings can be bad, In the case of the nocebo, it is negative expectations that become self-fulfilling prophecies.
- 15 May 2014, Jennifer Welsh, Researchers who Provided Key Evidence for Gluten Sensitivity have now Thoroughly Shown that It Doesn’t Exist, It seems to be a "nocebo" effect – the self-diagnosed gluten sensitive patients expected to feel worse on the study diets, so they did.