Up to three quarters of side effects caused by the Covid vaccine may be down to the 'nocebo' effect, study claims
- Millions say they have suffered headaches, fatigue and muscle pain after jabs
- But US scientists suggest that many are actually 'background sensations'
- It included 22,000 people who had side-effects despite not getting the vaccine
Up to three quarters of side effects caused by the Covid vaccine may be 'all in the head', experts say.
Millions of people across the world claim to have suffered headaches, tiredness and even diarrhoea after getting jabbed.
But scientists at Harvard believe the vast majority of the effects may be down to the 'Nocebo' effect, a phenomenon that occurs when someone faces an uncomfortable side effect from a drug simply because they expected to.
In the study, researchers drew on reports from 44,000 people to look at common side effects after getting jabbed.
But half of the participants were not told they had actually been given a placebo, or fake vaccine — such as a saline solution.
The researchers said many side effects people claimed were due to jabs were likely actually triggered by 'background sensations' not linked to jabs. They said anxiety about vaccines had made people 'hyper-alert' to their bodies, leading many to link unrelated issues to the vaccine.
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Experts analysed the rates of side effects in around 22,000 people who were given the Covid vaccine in clinical trials. This was compared to a control group of roughly the same size that was given the fake vaccine.
Placebos are a routine part of all clinical trials, and are used to establish whether a treatment is working.
In the vaccinated group, approximately 46 per cent suffered adverse effects like a headache or exhaustion after the first vaccine. This rose to 61 per cent of the group after the second jab.
Roughly a third of participants given the placebo group reported adverse effects such as a headache, with the proportion dropping slightly after the second dose.
The scientists looked at the rate of side effects in the placebo group to get a baseline for how many imagined side effects patients report.
They then compared them to the rates in the vaccine group to make an estimate on the proportion that are genuine.
Most of the ailments in the placebo group were presumed to be imagined because they were not actually given a drug - in what is known as the 'placebo effect'.
The team estimated 76 per cent of all headaches, fatigue and other adverse events reported after the first dose were not due to the vaccine itself.
But this dropped to 52 per cent after the second dose.
Scientists said the proportion of genuine side-effects from the jab rose after the second dose because the immune system was fired up.
Scientists said people in the placebo group reported fewer reactions after the second dose because they had been less likely to experience one after the first jab.
This, they argued, made them less concerned about suffering a reaction when they got their second jab and, therefore, less likely to report one.
Professor Ted Kaptchuk, a world-renowned expert in the placebo effect who was involved IN the research, said it was clear negative expectations were leading to some 'side effects' being wrongly attributed to the vaccines.
He said: 'Nonspecific symptoms like headache and fatigue — which we have shown to be particularly nocebo sensitive — are listed among the most common adverse reactions following Covid vaccination in many information leaflets.
'Evidence suggests that this sort of information may cause people to misattribute common daily background sensations as arising from the vaccine.
'Or [it could] cause anxiety and worry that makes people hyper alert to bodily feelings about adverse events.'
The study was published in the journal JAMA Open Research.
It included jabs made by AstraZeneca, Pfizer and Moderna — all in used in the UK.
It also included the Johnson and Johnson jab, which is being used in the US but not in the UK, and some vaccines that were still in trials.
Clinical trials always include placebo groups in order to establish whether the trial treatment has any impact.
Volunteers given sugar pills or saline injections are treated in exactly the same way to the group receiving the actual treatment.
In Covid vaccine trials placebo groups were double-blind — meaning neither they or the scientists administering the vaccines knew who was getting the actual vaccine.
Britain's health regulator lists headaches and fatigue as common side effects of being inoculated, which affect around one in 10 people who get the jab.
The MHRA has received more than 1.4million reports of side-effects since the roll out began out of more than 50million doses dished out.
But many complaints are for conditions including ear problems, eye problems and indigestion, which have never been linked to the vaccines.
The same data has, however, also allowed regulators to spot blood clots and other rare side effects by determining what complications are occurring more often than expected.
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