Athletes Intending to Use Sports Supplements Are More Likely to Respond to a Placebo
@article{Hurst2017AthletesIT, title={Athletes Intending to Use Sports Supplements Are More Likely to Respond to a Placebo}, author={Philip Hurst and Abby Foad and Damian Coleman and Chris Beedie}, journal={Medicine \& Science in Sports \& Exercise}, year={2017}, volume={49}, pages={1877–1883}, url={https://api.semanticscholar.org/CorpusID:38063749} }
Information about a harmful supplement worsened repeat sprint performance (a mean nocebo effect), whereas information about a beneficial supplement did not improve performance (no mean placebo effect) but participants' intention to use sport supplements influenced the direction and magnitude of subsequent placebo responses.
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