Placebo in Clinical Trials: What Participants Should Know
Learn about the use of placebos in clinical research, including randomization, blinding, and what it means for participants.
Learn about the use of placebos in clinical research, including randomization, blinding, and what it means for participants.
Learn about the use of placebos in clinical research, including randomization, blinding, and what it means for participants.
A placebo is an inactive substance or treatment that looks identical to the treatment being tested but has no active therapeutic ingredients. Placebos are used in clinical trials to help determine whether the treatment's effects are due to the active ingredients or to other factors such as the participant's expectations.
Randomization means participants are assigned to treatment or placebo groups by chance, like flipping a coin. Blinding means participants and sometimes researchers do not know who is receiving the treatment and who is receiving the placebo. Single-blind studies keep participants unaware, while double-blind studies keep both participants and researchers unaware of group assignments.
Placebos are used ethically when no standard treatment exists for the condition, or when the current standard treatment has limited effectiveness. Participants are always informed during the consent process that they may receive a placebo and are told the probability of receiving the treatment versus placebo.
Learn about the rigorous safety protocols, ethical guidelines, and regulatory oversight that protect clinical trial participants.
A comprehensive breakdown of the four phases of clinical trials and what each phase means for participants and researchers.
Understand the differences between observational studies and interventional clinical trials and what each involves.
Detailed guide to Phase 1 clinical trials, the first step in testing new treatments in humans.
This guide is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult with a qualified healthcare provider before making decisions about clinical trial participation or any medical treatment. StudyReward does not provide medical recommendations or endorse specific clinical trials.