Tylenol May Kill Kindness (washingtonpost.com)
Long-time Slashdot reader randomErr writes: In research published in the journal Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience scientists describe the results of two experiments conducted involving more than 200 college students.Their conclusion is that acetaminophen can reduce a person's capacity to empathize with another person's pain. "We don't know why acetaminophen is having these effects, but it is concerning," senior author Baldwin Way, an Ohio State University psychologist, said. One of the studies has half the group consume a liquid with acetaminophen while the other group received a placebo. The group that drink the acetaminophen thought that people they read about experiencing pain was not as severe as the placebo group thought.
The Washington Post notes that acetaminophen is the most common drug ingredient in the United States, adding that "about a quarter of all Americans take acetaminophen every week."
The Washington Post notes that acetaminophen is the most common drug ingredient in the United States, adding that "about a quarter of all Americans take acetaminophen every week."
Tylenol can't stop Trump from winning!
You know what else kills kindness? MY FUCKING MIGRAINE YOU FUCKING CUNT. You can suffer my headache induced rage,
or you can suffer a far lesser animosity from giving me Tylenol.
for the republican billionaire elite.
I mean, the medicine alters your brain's perception of pain. Makes sense that it could, by proximity of function, alter your brain's perception of other people's pain.
"We need to get over this notion, that, for Apple to win... Microsoft must lose." - Steve Jobs, 1997
Hope the military aren't looking into this side effect.
"I bless every day that I continue to live, for every day is pure profit."
Perhaps this will shed some interesting light on the whole Theory of Mind thing.
Find a real news site.
This active ingredient is used by multiple manufacturers and highlighting a trade name and not the active ingredient the study was conducted on is bad practices.
The man must be high on this.
This is a very old story.
...what the republican party is mixing into the water at their conventions...
Is this specific to acetaminophen, or is the same effect observed with other pain killers ?
For the non-North-Americans, it's referring to Paracetamol.
Strangely, ibuprofen and aspirin have the same names, but aceominophen/paracetamol doesn't.
Given that scientists still don't know how acetaminophen works to relieve pain is it any surprise it could affect more than just the pain receptors?
"A person is smart. People are dumb, panicky dangerous animals and you know it." - K
The article says: "A substantial body of functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) research suggests that observing others experiencing pain (e.g. observing a person receiving a hot probe placed on the hand), activates brain regions that are also activated during one’s own experience of pain..."
I think most of us have experienced the "wince reaction" when we someone else take a hit.
My kids called this "sympathy pain" when they were little.
What interests me about this study is I wonder what effect acetaminophen would have on me, since it has no apparent effect on pain. I've spoken with others who also indicate acetaminophen is useless against pain.
The "sympathy pain" phenomenon leads to other questions...
If a painkiller can block it, and if the observation of a painful event triggers a measurable reaction in the subject's brain, are endorphins released?
If endorphins are released can this help explain why games like ice hockey and American football are so popular?
contact to see if shit-fiiled, mechanics. So I'm cans can become open platform, 'Yes' to any as it is licensed in eternity...Romeo dying' crowd -
Comparing Tylenol against placebo is a start, but until it's compared against other pain relievers we won't know if the effects are specific to the drug or a generalized response to pain relievers in general.
When you can't feel any pain? You may make the mistake of thinking others don't as well. So much for painkillers.
APK
P.S.=> I doubt THAT is the cause of this... or, is it?? apk
Over the years I've tried Tylenol for physical bumps and bruises and it has never seemed to work. Does it work for anyone? Aspirin and Ibuprofen both seem pretty effective, but Tylenol is like taking a sugar pill.
You are welcome on my lawn.
Actually paracetamol (acetaminophen for Americans) is effective against migraines but only in about 10% of people. The rule I was always told was that then you feel a migraine coming on - aura start etc. - you take paracetamol but if a migraine has already started ibuprofen is better. This seems to work most of the time for me.
However, in both cases these are mild pain relievers and while they work for my migraines which are not particularly severe for more severe cases, like those my dad used to sometimes have, more powerful medications are required. In the UK you can also get paracetamol with added codeine tablets over the counter (in limited numbers and dosages since codeine is mildly addictive) and I find this often works particularly well taken at the start of a migraine.
A quarter of americans per week take this?
A quarter of americans voted for trump.
All of them with sociopathic intent.
I wonder what the correlation here is.
See subject & we hit upon the same point (good to see someone else has the sensitivity to understand & pickup on this) https://science.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=10809267&cid=54729935/ !
* Good job...
APK
P.S.=> I've got to admit (& I did in that link's termination), however, that I doubt this is a psychological/psychiatric sciences based answer - I'd seriously lean to a more physiological mechanism honestly... apk
"The group that drink the acetaminophen thought that people they read about experiencing pain was not as severe as the placebo group thought."
If you can unscramble this, you're good. Slashdot "editors"--- great work!
Is it just painkilling meds doing this?
Is this result ALSO seen to any degree with say, aspirin, ibuprofen, etc?
That's the real question.
-Styopa
They needed a study to find that people are more sensitive to things they experience personally.
My grandmother could have told you that for free.
See subject & SAME 'great minds think alike' as I noted to this gent also (as we all hit upon the same point) https://science.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=10809267&cid=54729999/
* :)
APK
P.S.=> Good job - mod him up TO THE MAX folks (he & the other gent in the link above hit on it or rather wrote of it before I did) - it'd be a REAL "kick-in-the-ass" to find out this IS the case (mental vs. physiological)... apk
Of course the study needs to be replicated before it means anything at all, but either way it doesn't say anything specific about acetaminophen. As the study says, fMRI research shows that the same brain regions light up for our own pain as well as observing other people's pain so it would make sense that any drug that suppressed activity in those regions would also suppress our ability to "feel" other people's pain. The study only tested acetaminophen against placebo and didn't test any other pain medications to see if they had a similar effect. As usual with these kinds of premature media announcements, more research is needed.
How is that equivalent to killing kindness. Are slashdot editors just that fucking stupid, or did they learn the art of Drudge Report headlines.
What next, that people on narcotics or alcohol don't have your best interests at heart?
Tylenol causes prenatal inflammation to some.
During development, this attacks the CNS, destroying it.
The result is decades of lobbying and downplaying.
Corrupt as fuck.
Pain and particularly headaches. They should also compare with tylenol and pain together, and pain alone. I am betting they will find out while tylenol MAY have an effect, not using it will also have a strong negative effect....
C. Sagan : A demon haunted world:
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0345409469/
visit randi.org
You feel FOR other's pain.
You get an emotional reaction AS IF you're being hurt - minus the pain.
And even that is if you're REALLY susceptible to empathy. Most cases you just feel a bit sad.
Otherwise, doctors in hospitals would be dead from shock in a few days from all the pain they'd empathize with.
Similarly, we don't get carted out of theaters on a stretcher after watching a comedy surrounded by other people and their happiness.
It's a psychological study.
It's a safe bet that it is either bullshit or overblown bullshit.
Mit der Dummheit kämpfen Götter selbst vergebens
So Mitch McConnell and Paul Ryan are Tylenol addicts?
How's that Taboola money coming boys?
Sounds reasonable to me.
When I would take Excedrin (which has acetaminophen) I would get this lovey type feeling.
Maybe it acts like other drugs and reduces the ability of those lovey sections of the brain from working as well.
I am not a lovey guy but I am not about to jump to the conclusion is was all the Excedrin I was taking but I always worried a bit that I may have overdid it because of its affects on the liver. Now I have one more thing to dissuade me from using it.
A brand name makes better clickbait, which is all the only thing EditorDavid posts..
Because having pain reduces sensitivity to someone other's pain. (paracetamol kills it effectively).
Pain is an absolutely essential component of the information you get from your environment. It's a required part of complete cognitive process.
In case you missed most of reality (mass surveillance, stupefying media, federally mandated false education, economic disparity (bubbles, crashes, depressions), etc.), most of society exists to control you. The medical industry is no exception. It exists not to help you achieve your potential through good health, but to CONTROL you, keeping you healthy enough to work but too unhealthy to compete against higher status people.
By cutting out much of the stimulation and motivation that small pains provide, people are kept apathetic, stupid, and weak.
Your aching joints are telling you to stop being a lazy sack, your cuts, scrapes, and burns are trying to increase your coordination, and your headache is telling you order your life to reduce stress.
As if ANYONE couldn't tell this with common sense, as if this doesn't occur to every single doctor, as if this isn't on the mind of the doctors who devise medical protocols.
Of course it's intentional.
Just because you don't know what to do about it doesn't mean you have an excuse to ignore it.
I guess that explains how an ostensibly civilized country ended up electing a person, whose sole stand-out personality trait is being a complete and utter jerk, to its highest office. Empathy malfunction on a truly epic scale.
>"Their conclusion is that acetaminophen can reduce a person's capacity to empathize with another person's pain."
I find that ironic because it seems acetaminophen doesn't do anything at all to alleviate my pain, ever. Ibuprofen, on the other hand, works great. Perhaps many of the test volunteers were still IN PAIN when using acetaminophen and so they can't think of others at the time (pain is, unfortunately, very good at bringing focus to itself).
...you can't get away with this as an excuse.
"about a quarter of all Americans take acetaminophen every week."
Well, I finally understand why there are so many out and out a**holes on Internet message forums these days. Here I just thought it was basic human nature expressing itself from the anonymity of a made up user handle.
It's actually any pain medication. This study is flawed.
This information is commonly known.
-1 Slashdot
At some point there were ads everywhere for this t-shirt. Were they part of this study?
It's the menses.
Didn't someone show that US college students are pretty much the worst subjects to do any testing on?
http://ds-wordpress.haverford....
Why is Tylenol like Islam?
Tylenol is an American brand name for what they call Acetaminophen but is Paracetamol in the UK
I'm thinking of years back, someone did a study on what lead in gasoline might have done to people. IIRC the basic gist was they found in every country where lead was taken out of gasoline, starting at some fairly predictable point after it was removed, you'd start to see a decline in violence/crime that would improve every year thereafter. It basically mapped to when you reached the point where most of the youth alive (the ones most likely to engage in violence/crime) were born after the lead was removed.
And IIRC it was so pronounced and followed such a similar curve in every country that people have even suggested that a big part of the reason the USA has seen an overall decrease in violence in the past couple decades is because we took out lead from gasoline, made efforts to get it out of homes, etc.
So a lot of people now take note that people just seem meaner, crueler, less empathetic to others misfortune and so on. Now no doubt some of that is just due to the whole Internet anonymity makes people emboldened to be assholes, but what if some of it is due to people overusing Tylenol so much for decades now?
It's such a great painkiller that you can't even feel someone else's! I see the basis for a new marketing campaign.
I just had Tylenol and now I'm going to vote everyone's posts down on this topic.
"That's the way to do it" - Punch
First, let's see a real study, not one that only deals with a small subset of people around a certain age, at ONE school. but rather one that deals with people all over the country, of all ages, and is a true double-blind study. Also, what about the error bars? Did they actually do any real statistical analysis of their results? Like, you know, use real statisticians?
As I suspected they didn't do a good job with the statistics. No error measurements were taken. None analyzed. It is as if the researcher decided what the outcome of the study would be before they posed a hypothesis to test
I see it in the users behavior.