Author Interviews, Pain Research, Psychological Science / 11.05.2016
Taking Acetaminophen Reduces Empathy For Others
MedicalResearch.com Interview with:
Dominik Mischkowski, co-author of the study
Former Ph.D. student at Ohio State
Now at the National Institutes of Health
MedicalResearch.com: What is the background for this study? What are the main findings?
Dr. Mischkowski: We tested in two double blind experiments whether the popular physical painkiller acetaminophen reduces empathy for the pain of other people. In the first experiment (N=80), participants completed measures of empathy (i.e., perceived pain and personal distress) while reading hypothetical about the physical and social mishaps of other people. We found that acetaminophen reduced empathy for pain in these scenarios. In Study 2 (N=114), we replicated and extending these findings, showing that acetaminophen also decreased empathy (i.e., perceived pain, personal distress, and empathic concern) for another study participant experiencing ostracism or painful noise blasts. Furthermore, noise unpleasantness accounted for the effect of acetaminophen on empathy for noise pain.
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