The placebo effect is real. The nocebo effect is real. The anticipation of pain changes the intensity of pain. The expectation of recovery alters the biology of recovery. For decades, these findings were treated as inconvenient footnotes to the real science. They're not footnotes. They're central to how human healing works.
In The Belief Effect, Dr. Patricia A. Farrell examines the documented science of how expectation, meaning, and interpretation shape physiological outcomes in ways that researchers can now measure with precision. This includes the neuroscience of expectation, the role of the prefrontal cortex in modulating pain and immune response, how doctor-patient interactions change treatment outcomes, and what the research on ritual, ceremony, and symbolic meaning reveals about the body's responsiveness to context.
This is not a book about the law of attraction or the power of positive thinking. It's a book about the mechanisms behind something real and replicable: the fact that what you believe about your situation, your treatment, and your body's capacities changes what your body does. Dr. Farrell explains those mechanisms clearly, without overstating what the science supports and without dismissing what it documents.
The second book in the Reasons We Heal series, The Belief Effect, stands alone but deepens the picture for readers who've started with Wired for Good. For anyone who's been told that their recovery is mostly in their head, this book will give you a more accurate and considerably more empowering answer.
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