It’s complicated. As I’m often wont to point out when such topics come up, the hemlock potion that Socrates (Remember him? Ever even heard of him?) was obliged to drink was almost certainly vegan, fresh & all-natural, minimally processed, locally sourced, sustainably & organically grown, raised without cruelty & free-range, low sodium, no artificial sweeteners, colors, flavors, hormones, or antibiotics, no added nitrates or nitrites, and trans-fat-, DDT-, SO2-, NOx-, GMO-, MSG-, HFCS-, BST-, BPA-, CFC-, VOC-, vaccine-, brominated flame retardant-, bisphenol A-, fluoride-, gluten-, gelatin-, glyphosate-, PFAS-, PFOS-, PFOA-, peanut-, tree nut-, fish-, shellfish-, soy-, dairy-, egg-, wheat-, sesame , lactose, acrylamide-, sulfoxaflor-, neonicotinoid-, nitrosamine-, phtalate-, paraben-, and now microplastic- free. Nothing whatever synthetic; the exact opposite of an ultra-processed, chemical-filled, carnivorous food. It killed him anyway…
The point being that vegan, “all natural” and/or “organic” and/or “minimally processed” doesn’t in any necessary way mean that something is healthier, safer, or better for you. Likewise, if something contains some chemically sounding ingredients, it doesn’t necessarily mean that it’s bad for you. No doubt that less processed is mostly better, but science by its very nature cannot ethically offer certainty; for that you need religion and its snake oil. Life simply isn’t that simple. Bon appétit!
I rely on the placebo effect, even when taking medication that actually has a therapeutic effect. That’s how I managed to do things like go to a movie and eat popcorn and drink hot coffee two hours after having my wisdom teeth removed. (But when it suddenly dawned on me that the Tylenol was wearing off, boy did I need that next pill.)
The brain has no pain receptors, so it can’t feel pain. And yet pain is all in the brain. Go figure!
Some people appear to be genuinely helped by placebos. Which always creates problems in doing studies. In a blind test 23% of your sample volunteers taking the actual medication report feeling better. Of course, in that blind testing 27% of the volunteers taking the placebo report feeling much better. Do you proclaim your product a success with 23% of the people using it feeling better, or do you start marketing the placebo?
I never understood why they made a big deal about jellyfish in a brain supplement, considering jellyfish don’t have brains. Then again, neither do those who believe this nonsense…
I recall a Born Loser strip several years ago where Brutus is asked by his son what a placebo was. When Brutus answered his son replied, “that explains decaffeinated coffee.”
If I may inject my perception of this strip into the discussion: D’bury is vividly pointing out how pharmaceutical companies would come up with “scientific’ research” documenting the health benefits of injecting newborns with Superfund Cleanup site tailings if it boosted their stock dividends and share price.
The doc is right … candy is dandy, (but liquor is quicker.) My personals are Butterfinger and 3 Musketeers (the double bars!) One issue is the Butterfinger tends to physically stick to your teeth and it takes some work to pry it all off. Those and a Big Gulp or a large Coke at McDonalds on a long trip tend to give me energy to hang behind the wheel, those and a book on tape or tunes from my phone. Empty calories, I know, dear!
I just went back and looked at that original strip (June 4, if you’re wondering) and have to wonder if those were actual quotes from the website. If they were, they were absolutely ludicrous, almost out of a piece in The Onion.
butterfinger, kit-kat, twix, and reeses in that order. That’s the OTC “fix”. For more serious treatment I wll prescribe compartés, toblerone, or ghiardelli’s, depending on symptoms.
It does sadden me that super liberal MSNBC runs commercials for Prevagen and/or Balance of Nature. A LOT. And doesn’t the supposed super smart Big Bang Theory star and Jeopardy host also hawk one of them? Shame on these folks for this.
Some of this junk is marketed as having no side effects, which prompts me to cite McKenzie’s Law: “If it has no side effects, it isn’t doing anything.” —Dr. Brennen McKenzie
Yes, it’s true that aspirin resulted from real relief that people reported from chewing birchbark, and that we got penicillin because Alexander Fleming noticed that bread mold fended off bacterial growth. So there’s a basis for saying that some actual medicines were discovered in nature rather than invented in a lab. This nugget of truth has, however, been wildly exaggerated by the “natural cure” and “alternative medicine” con artists.
Q: Do you know what they call alternative medicine that’s been proven effective?
I was in the drugstore trying to choose between two zinc-based “cold remedies.” Neither was backed by any medical research. Both had the same ingredients. One was brand-name, the other store-brand and much cheaper. Both sported the “not intended to diagnose or treat any illness” disclaimer. So the question came down to:
Expensive brand name placebo or cheap store brand placebo?
we interrupt this program at the third panel while i burst out laughing at the pregnant vermin remarks… you really did it Trudeau… you one-upped yourself again!!
I know a guy who tells the store of a drug company that developed a new medication and decided to have a little internal contest in which employees would suggest the new drug’s name. The winning entry was “OBECALP,” and it got as far as actually creating labels and some marketing materials before the guy who came up with it admitted to the management that his winning submission was just “placebo” spelled backwards.
For anyone reading this far into the comments, D.D. Degg of The Daily Cartoonist site provides a, uh, supplement to this Doonesbury, with some explanations of what’s going on here. Worth reading, and dailycartoonist is all one word, if you’re searching.
And if you go there, also check out CSOTD, which is always worth reading.
In response to Mark’s question in panel 4, no, I don’t remember the strip with Eastern-European-accented rats endorsing Nature’s Balance products. Can some kind soul in the comments section please provide the date the strip ran? I can take it from there. TIA.
Even when you know they are placebos they can have an effect. And when you believe a certain medicine will make you sick, it will happen. The nocebo effect.
“There are no peer-reviewed, independent, clinical studies available to support the health claims made directly by the makers of Prevagen regarding the product’s efficacy.” (Forbes, earlier in 2023)
What I particularly hate about the Prevagen commercials is that they show a pharmacist casually walking down the aisle to advise a shopper. This is very far from the zoo a pharmacist has to deal with at a typical Walgreens or CVS during their shift. Sure, I’ve found that if I ask a question of the pharmacist I get good, helpful answers, but they certainly don’t have time to wander the aisles.
It is not that placebos sometimes work; it is that some conditions cure themselves, even if nothing (including administering placebos) is done.
It is a fundamental characteristic of the human body that it has evolved to heal itself of many, many ills. I’m not saying it does not sometimes need help; I am saying that it makes it easier to bamboozle people into trying “snake oil” products and get anecdotal reports of success.
The purpose of a well-constructed “double blind” study is that the researchers don’t know which is the “real” treatment, the subjects don’t know and, ideally, the subject’s body does not know the difference (admitted the trickiest part).
This is a fundamentally different approach than “my Mom tried some and felt better after the divorce”. :)
BE THIS GUY 12 months ago
My brother the doctor prescribes Snickers. He only prescribes Twix for those with peanut allergies.
Alexander the Good Enough 12 months ago
It’s complicated. As I’m often wont to point out when such topics come up, the hemlock potion that Socrates (Remember him? Ever even heard of him?) was obliged to drink was almost certainly vegan, fresh & all-natural, minimally processed, locally sourced, sustainably & organically grown, raised without cruelty & free-range, low sodium, no artificial sweeteners, colors, flavors, hormones, or antibiotics, no added nitrates or nitrites, and trans-fat-, DDT-, SO2-, NOx-, GMO-, MSG-, HFCS-, BST-, BPA-, CFC-, VOC-, vaccine-, brominated flame retardant-, bisphenol A-, fluoride-, gluten-, gelatin-, glyphosate-, PFAS-, PFOS-, PFOA-, peanut-, tree nut-, fish-, shellfish-, soy-, dairy-, egg-, wheat-, sesame , lactose, acrylamide-, sulfoxaflor-, neonicotinoid-, nitrosamine-, phtalate-, paraben-, and now microplastic- free. Nothing whatever synthetic; the exact opposite of an ultra-processed, chemical-filled, carnivorous food. It killed him anyway…
The point being that vegan, “all natural” and/or “organic” and/or “minimally processed” doesn’t in any necessary way mean that something is healthier, safer, or better for you. Likewise, if something contains some chemically sounding ingredients, it doesn’t necessarily mean that it’s bad for you. No doubt that less processed is mostly better, but science by its very nature cannot ethically offer certainty; for that you need religion and its snake oil. Life simply isn’t that simple. Bon appétit!
Algolei I 12 months ago
I rely on the placebo effect, even when taking medication that actually has a therapeutic effect. That’s how I managed to do things like go to a movie and eat popcorn and drink hot coffee two hours after having my wisdom teeth removed. (But when it suddenly dawned on me that the Tylenol was wearing off, boy did I need that next pill.)
The brain has no pain receptors, so it can’t feel pain. And yet pain is all in the brain. Go figure!
jvo 12 months ago
People will swear that some brands of medicine work better than others, despite containing the exact same dose of active ingredient.
Composition of the binding, form factors, and coatings may make it more, or less, pleasant to take, but the effectiveness is the same.
snsurone76 12 months ago
Most placebos are alcohol, tobacco, and illicit drugs. And for many—junk food.
Hello Everyone 12 months ago
When was the previous strip? I’d like to re-read it!
eced52 12 months ago
My mother said the same thing about ice cream. The cheaper brands have less junk in them.
joaopereiralx Premium Member 12 months ago
Previous strip mentioned is from 04th June 2023
LawrenceS 12 months ago
Some people appear to be genuinely helped by placebos. Which always creates problems in doing studies. In a blind test 23% of your sample volunteers taking the actual medication report feeling better. Of course, in that blind testing 27% of the volunteers taking the placebo report feeling much better. Do you proclaim your product a success with 23% of the people using it feeling better, or do you start marketing the placebo?
markkahler52 12 months ago
I take “time release” placebos myself. Then, I lie down for long periods of illness…
donut reply 12 months ago
This is the second Sunday comic by Doonesbury about Prevagen. Garry must really hate the stuff.
Want to be more alert, chew gum.
mwest 12 months ago
I never understood why they made a big deal about jellyfish in a brain supplement, considering jellyfish don’t have brains. Then again, neither do those who believe this nonsense…
WaitingMan 12 months ago
Out of curiosity, I went to the Balance of Nature website to check on their prices. Not surprisingly, if you have to ask, you can’t afford them.
tstuarta1 12 months ago
I recall a Born Loser strip several years ago where Brutus is asked by his son what a placebo was. When Brutus answered his son replied, “that explains decaffeinated coffee.”
oakie817 12 months ago
so we can save Congress by feeding them M&Ms?
1953Baby 12 months ago
New York Peppermint patties. . .Werther’s hard caramel candies. . .
aerotica69 12 months ago
Kit Kat to improve memory, peanut M&Ms when I remember bad things.
e.groves 12 months ago
Anyone else remember when Steve Martin said that he found a new drug? He said that it was called “pla-cee-bo.”
shackleford Premium Member 12 months ago
Link to the earlier comic, from June 4, 2023: >
timinwsac Premium Member 12 months ago
I prefer Dr. Pepper.
ladykat 12 months ago
The best medicine.
octagon 12 months ago
I’ve been using Balance of Nature for about 4 years. Should I quit on Gary Trudeau’s say so.
IWannaBeLerxst 12 months ago
If I may inject my perception of this strip into the discussion: D’bury is vividly pointing out how pharmaceutical companies would come up with “scientific’ research” documenting the health benefits of injecting newborns with Superfund Cleanup site tailings if it boosted their stock dividends and share price.
proclusstudent 12 months ago
<https://www.gocomics.Com/doonesbury/2023/06/04>
Redd Panda 12 months ago
Must be said in a Jack Webb Dragnet voice …..
’’Don’t you kid yourself.
That’s the way it starts, maybe a couple a gum drops.
Then you switch to Twix and before you know it, you’re doing 5 or 6 Milky Ways a day. And stealing to support your habit.
I’ve seen it all my friend and it ain’t pretty.’’
Today’s Fun Fact: Leonard Nimoy did an episode of Dragnet.
mindjob 12 months ago
Scientists might get sued for doing their jobs, if their research doesn’t give the results the company wants
Honorable Mention In The Banjo Toss Premium Member 12 months ago
I went to see a band once called Placebo. They were selling blank CD’s, but you felt like you had heard some music.
JR0602 12 months ago
The doc is right … candy is dandy, (but liquor is quicker.) My personals are Butterfinger and 3 Musketeers (the double bars!) One issue is the Butterfinger tends to physically stick to your teeth and it takes some work to pry it all off. Those and a Big Gulp or a large Coke at McDonalds on a long trip tend to give me energy to hang behind the wheel, those and a book on tape or tunes from my phone. Empty calories, I know, dear!
ajnotales 12 months ago
I don’t waste time with drugs and placebos … I just eat the, uh, whattayacallem … uh, JELLYFISH! Yeah, jellyfish…
Bob Blumenfeld 12 months ago
I just went back and looked at that original strip (June 4, if you’re wondering) and have to wonder if those were actual quotes from the website. If they were, they were absolutely ludicrous, almost out of a piece in The Onion.
https://www.Gocomics.com/doonesbury/2023/06/04
Dis-play name 12 months ago
“Rock Candy” (aka crystal meth) works for me.
stamps 12 months ago
I always get the extra-strength placebos.
vick53 12 months ago
ROFLMAO!!!!!!!!!! I feel vindicated!!!
Packratjohn Premium Member 12 months ago
butterfinger, kit-kat, twix, and reeses in that order. That’s the OTC “fix”. For more serious treatment I wll prescribe compartés, toblerone, or ghiardelli’s, depending on symptoms.
elvistcob 12 months ago
It does sadden me that super liberal MSNBC runs commercials for Prevagen and/or Balance of Nature. A LOT. And doesn’t the supposed super smart Big Bang Theory star and Jeopardy host also hawk one of them? Shame on these folks for this.
Richard S Russell Premium Member 12 months ago
Some of this junk is marketed as having no side effects, which prompts me to cite McKenzie’s Law: “If it has no side effects, it isn’t doing anything.” —Dr. Brennen McKenzie
jeffchrz Premium Member 12 months ago
Here me out: Jellyfish Twix
Richard S Russell Premium Member 12 months ago
Yes, it’s true that aspirin resulted from real relief that people reported from chewing birchbark, and that we got penicillin because Alexander Fleming noticed that bread mold fended off bacterial growth. So there’s a basis for saying that some actual medicines were discovered in nature rather than invented in a lab. This nugget of truth has, however, been wildly exaggerated by the “natural cure” and “alternative medicine” con artists.
Q: Do you know what they call alternative medicine that’s been proven effective?
A: Medicine.
puddleglum1066 12 months ago
I was in the drugstore trying to choose between two zinc-based “cold remedies.” Neither was backed by any medical research. Both had the same ingredients. One was brand-name, the other store-brand and much cheaper. Both sported the “not intended to diagnose or treat any illness” disclaimer. So the question came down to:
Expensive brand name placebo or cheap store brand placebo?
Hmm…
lalapalooza Premium Member 12 months ago
we interrupt this program at the third panel while i burst out laughing at the pregnant vermin remarks… you really did it Trudeau… you one-upped yourself again!!
puddleglum1066 12 months ago
I know a guy who tells the store of a drug company that developed a new medication and decided to have a little internal contest in which employees would suggest the new drug’s name. The winning entry was “OBECALP,” and it got as far as actually creating labels and some marketing materials before the guy who came up with it admitted to the management that his winning submission was just “placebo” spelled backwards.
Cactus-Pete 12 months ago
I’d say that Twix is more like a cookie than candy.
willie_mctell 12 months ago
When they say that a study shows, they don’t necessarily mean a scientific study.
braindead Premium Member 12 months ago
For anyone reading this far into the comments, D.D. Degg of The Daily Cartoonist site provides a, uh, supplement to this Doonesbury, with some explanations of what’s going on here. Worth reading, and dailycartoonist is all one word, if you’re searching.
And if you go there, also check out CSOTD, which is always worth reading.
Tupelodan 12 months ago
Zagnut fixes me up right away … when I can find one.
kaylasdad99 12 months ago
In response to Mark’s question in panel 4, no, I don’t remember the strip with Eastern-European-accented rats endorsing Nature’s Balance products. Can some kind soul in the comments section please provide the date the strip ran? I can take it from there. TIA.
edward.klintworth 12 months ago
The joke at the end reminds of the late Fred Allen of radio show fame.
eddi-TBH 12 months ago
Even when you know they are placebos they can have an effect. And when you believe a certain medicine will make you sick, it will happen. The nocebo effect.
chozen 12 months ago
There is an actual study, small but apparently well-done, indicating that chocolate can improve memory. (I actually am an MD.) >
chozen 12 months ago
But it was the equivalent of seven bars of chocolate each day. NYTimes 2014/10/27 “To improve memory consider chocolate”.
ZBicyclist Premium Member 12 months ago
“There are no peer-reviewed, independent, clinical studies available to support the health claims made directly by the makers of Prevagen regarding the product’s efficacy.” (Forbes, earlier in 2023)
What I particularly hate about the Prevagen commercials is that they show a pharmacist casually walking down the aisle to advise a shopper. This is very far from the zoo a pharmacist has to deal with at a typical Walgreens or CVS during their shift. Sure, I’ve found that if I ask a question of the pharmacist I get good, helpful answers, but they certainly don’t have time to wander the aisles.
NaGrom Premium Member 12 months ago
Did he say “maguffin”?
mistercatworks 12 months ago
It is not that placebos sometimes work; it is that some conditions cure themselves, even if nothing (including administering placebos) is done.
It is a fundamental characteristic of the human body that it has evolved to heal itself of many, many ills. I’m not saying it does not sometimes need help; I am saying that it makes it easier to bamboozle people into trying “snake oil” products and get anecdotal reports of success.
The purpose of a well-constructed “double blind” study is that the researchers don’t know which is the “real” treatment, the subjects don’t know and, ideally, the subject’s body does not know the difference (admitted the trickiest part).
This is a fundamentally different approach than “my Mom tried some and felt better after the divorce”. :)
[Unnamed Reader - 14b4ce] 12 months ago
I’m more worried about ads that list two zillion “Possible side effects”,and then they actually expect you to buy it anyway