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How Beliefs Shape Medication Response

April 2, 2026by Chris Aiken, MD0
What if your patient’s skepticism is why the antidepressant isn’t working?

STUDY: Bonnet U, Clin Neuropharm 2026;00:000–000

STUDY TYPE: Case report

FUNDING: Independent

Background

The placebo is a well-known part of antidepressant response, but it’s opposite can also enter into the picture: the nocebo effect. This case report illustrates just how much that belief can matter.

The Study

A 47-year-old woman with severe melancholic depression spent months insisting her symptoms were medical, not psychiatric. She agreed — reluctantly — to venlafaxine ER, titrated to 300 mg/day. The med failed.

Later, four weekly educational sessions helped her accept her diagnosis and believe that venlafaxine could help. Restarted at 150 mg/day under this new mindset, it worked. She reached remission and has stayed there for over a year.

Was she having a placebo response? Not exactly. A prior course of psychotherapy hadn’t helped her depression either. More likely, the nocebo response was preventing the medication from working in the first trial. However, placebo response is not a all-or-nothing phenomena. For most patients, it is part of their response, just in varying degrees.

Limitation: Single case, spontaneous remission can’t be ruled out.

Practice Implications
  1. Sometimes it is unwise to have patients try medications when they don’t believe they can help, particularly in placebo (and noncebo) responsive disorders like depression and anxiety.
  2. Learn how to engage patients with treatment in our Carlat interview with Shawn Christopher Shea, or through his book, the Medication Interest Model.

— Chris Aiken, MD
Director, Psych Partners
Editor in Chief, Carlat Psychiatry Report

What’s Your Take? Share in Comments
  1. Have you seen patient’s beliefs shape their response to medication?

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