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Blind both groups (controls and intervention), apply a placebo cream to both groups, and energy work to the intervention group only.
What purpose does it serve to administer the cream to both groups?
How are you going to blind both groups, but apply energy work to one of them? Those recipients will be aware of the fact that they are receiving energy work, wouldn't they?
I would go for the 'no touch' method of energy work if that could be arranged.
Yes, sorry, thought the randomization and blinding were assumed based on previous comments.
Blind both groups (controls and intervention), apply a placebo cream to both groups, and energy work to the intervention group only.
Use of trained MT's, who practice energy work, and have at least 10 years experience.
OR, use of one MT group who do not practice energy work compared to a group receiving treatment from MT's who do practice energy work; with10 years experience. Holding only, no other body work applied.
Actually, Bert, for this experiment I am advocating use of energy work only; just to see simple effects of speeding up the process of bruising without any massage or other body work.
Christopher A. Moyer said:Robin Byler Thomas said:Not sure; help me out here; maybe ice only, oh I know, an ointment of some kind.
But even if 'energy' works, we don't know ahead of time if it works better or worse than those things. Also, the recipients' beliefs in those different treatments are likely to differ in ways that we can't accurately quantify.
It would be better to randomly assign all subjects to treatment and nontreatment groups, and then have blinding so that no one knows whether they've been treated or not. That would actually control for the placebo effect.
This might require every subject to place their injured limb under a screen which would prevent them from seeing whether or not they were being treated.
I absolutely agree that placebo effects are possible from conducting a session or energy work; in fact, I'd go on to say that's the only type of effect that is possible.
I was thinking about this too. How will the various natural healing rates of patients in different states of health and of different age affect the outcome. Would you need 1000s of experiments to reduce the 'noise'?
Vlad said:The squirrel has a couple of q's:
- Does the application of a "sham" ointment not add to the complexity of it?
- I can see how hiding the arms in boxes might make it really "blinded" but is the point not to make it like the "real world" scenario as much as possible?
- I'm with Rick on the "no touch" aspect since touch adds more complexity also. So, could it not be a blinded randomized study with a sham group of MTs, doing work off the wrists mixed with real energy workers doing their thing off the wrists. The measurements could be the speed at which swelling (circumference measurements of the wrists) and pain levels decrease?
- How much will the health of the recipients come into play? Someone that works out and looks after himself diet wise will probably heal faster than someone that doesn't. I suppose this is where numbers in the study comes into play big time, eh?
What about the possibility of entrainment? Granted, I'm certainly not a physicist, but the concept of entrainment gave me an idea of why energy work might "work," at least for some.
If the subject and the therapist both wore a blindfold would this count as doing a double blind trail ?
Just curious Robin, why the reference to 10 years of experience? Did you just choose the number of years of involvement at random, or do you have a reason?
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