If I was experiencing a particular condition, is there anything I wouldn’t want to get involved in? …No, there isn’t. If I’ve got the condition and I want it to be treated... mind you, I’d have to be absolutely convinced, like with an aneurysm, I’d have to be convinced that it was going to treat me. I wouldn’t want to just sort of sign up for it because, you know, it was going to pay me £20, or something stupid like that. I would want to - it’s the quality of the care that I would get that would be vital, and the background knowledge that I was going to be given that would be vital… especially for aneurysm.
So for instance a placebo-controlled trial, how would you feel about being offered that, where you might be randomised to getting a placebo or you might get the treatment?
I wouldn’t want to do that - if it was so vital that I had the treatment. For - I can’t even think in what context I would, it would be okay to have a placebo rather than the actual product, if it was going to work. Because if I, even if I’d scratched myself, I wouldn’t want to have a placebo dressing and then someone else gets, you know, an all -singing all-dancing dressing that heals them in two days, or something like that, so.
I suppose the problem with trials is by definition you don’t know if the intervention is actually going to be any better than the placebo. But there’s something that worries you about…
There is, yeah. Because, I think, of the fact that I’ve had this neurosurgery*, I’m thinking, you know, I wouldn’t want to be involved in anything that was potentially - I mean, okay, fine, if all the products are going to sort me out, or potentially going to sort me out - mind you, placebo might as well, mightn’t it, because it might just sort of, you know, the fact that you’re taking something or you’re sticking something somewhere might just be the thing that you need to get you through. I don’t know.
But for that to work you’ve got to believe it’s something that’s actually an intervention?
Yes, but as well I would - would I know the difference? I probably wouldn’t know the difference, if I wasn’t told it. I’d think, “Oh this, you know, I’ve got to take it tds” [three times a day] or whatever, and that’s it, and I’ll do it. You know, I’m very regular with what I do, you know. I’m very sort of emphatic about times and all this sort of thing, and if I thought it was going to work I’d blooming take it.
* FOOTNOTE: Jenny has recently had surgery for a cerebral aneurysm (an abnormal bulge in an artery in her brain).