Nutrition & DietFake Pills Boost Memory and Strength in Older Adults Even When They Know It's a Placebo
Researchers at Università Cattolica in Milan found that placebo pills — both deceptive and openly fake — produced meaningful improvements in memory, physical performance, and stress in healthy older adults after just three weeks. The study assigned 90 participants to three groups: no treatment, a deceptive placebo, or an open-label placebo where participants knew the pill was inactive. Surprisingly, the open-label group often outperformed the deceptive group, with physical performance rising 9.2% and cognitive scores improving up to 21.5%. Stress levels dropped most significantly in those who knowingly took the placebo. The findings suggest the mind-body connection plays a powerful role in age-related decline, and that psychological expectation — even without deception — can drive measurable biological change.