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Re: GEN: PlacebosFrom: rmodugno@aol.comSun Oct 26 09:33:07 2008
Not necessarily Dean! The patient often DEMANDS treatment!  Robert Modugno MD MBA FACOG Sylva, NC -----Original Message----- From: Dean Huffman <dean@thehuffpeople.net> To: Multiple recipients of list OB-GYN-L <ob-gyn-l@mail.obgyn.net> Sent: Sun, 26 Oct 2008 11:00 am Subject: Re: GEN: Placebos .  The difference is that in the cases you mentioned, the placebo is for the PHYSICIAN, not the patient!  - - - -  From: "art fougner, md" <evsono@pipeline.com> Subject: Re: GEN: Placebos Date: Oct 26, 2008 9:36 AM  Anyone who's written a scrip for antibiotics for a URI has pretty much administered a placebo. Anyone who's given patients oral terbutaline for uterine contractions has administered placebo. Then there's progesterone suppositories for threatened miscarriage or "low serum progesterone" - the list goes on.  At Sun, 26 Oct 2008, Efrain Ramirez wrote: > >I don't >Ef > >At Fri, 24 Oct 2008, DoctorJoe@aol.com wrote: >> >>Majority of Doctors Use Placebos, Survey Finds >> >>A new survey of American doctors has found that about half of respondents >>give their patients placebo treatments, in many cases without informing them that >>the treatment wonâ??t necessarily be helpful. The study, published in the >>online journal BMJ, surveyed a random sample of nearly 700 internists and >>rheumatologists of which about 60 percent said that placebo treatments were ethically >>acceptable. Studies in Britain, Denmark and Sweden have reported similar >>findings. à Chantal Britt, Bloomberg à 10/24/2008 >>Read Article: Bloomberg à à>> >>Joe P. >> >>no registration required and great graphics â?? check it out! > >-- >"I can accept failure, but I can't accept not trying." - Michael Jordan >  --Â
-- art fougner, mdÂ
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