Stuff You Should Know - Selects: What Is Collective Hysteria?
Episode Date: December 4, 2021Throughout the history of the world, there have been many cases of what is known as collective hysteria - groups of people, usually young women, who all exhibit the same physical symptoms of non-exist...ent conditions. Is it psychosomatic? Is it group think? Find out in this classic episode. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast Frosted Tips with Lance Bass.
Do you ever think to yourself, what advice would Lance Bass and my favorite boy bands
give me in this situation? If you do, you've come to the right place because I'm here to help.
And a different hot sexy teen crush boy bander each week to guide you through life.
Tell everybody, yeah, everybody about my new podcast and make sure to listen so we'll never,
ever have to say bye, bye, bye. Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass on the iHeart
radio app, Apple podcast, or wherever you listen to podcasts.
I'm Munga Chauticular and it turns out astrology is way more widespread than any of us want to
believe. You can find in Major League Baseball, International Banks, K-pop groups, even the White
House. But just when I thought I had a handle on this subject, something completely unbelievable
happened to me and my whole view on astrology changed. Whether you're a skeptic or a believer,
give me a few minutes because I think your ideas are about to change too. Listen to Skyline Drive
on the iHeart radio app, Apple podcast, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey everyone, it's Josh and I've chosen for this week's SYSK Select our 2014 episode on the
inappropriately named Collective Hysteria. It turns out that people can have a real effect on how
other people feel and behave, so take this as a sign to be nice and maybe even soothing to others.
And while you're working on that, enjoy this super cool episode on some super weird psychology.
Welcome to Stuff You Should Know, a production of iHeart radio.
Hey and welcome to the podcast. I'm Josh Clark with me as always as Charles W. Chuck Bryant
and Jerry's over there to the left and that makes this Stuff You Should Know. Got the A team
in the hizzy. I call face. What? Oh, I'm face. Oh, of course you're face. Look at you. I would be a
combination of Murdock and Mr. T. Yeah. Well, your hair is kind of spiky in the middle today.
Yeah, Jerry. I don't know what she'd be. I guess she'd be the leader. She'd be Hannibal. Oh, yeah.
You know? She's smoking a cigar right now. And wearing a black glove. When did you start smoking
cigars, Jerry? That's weird. Very timely. I've said A team. I don't want to slag off
guest producer Noel. He's not exactly B team. No. We'll just call herself the OGs. Okay.
Now that we have that established, we are the OGs. That's right. We need bowling shirts that
say as much on the back. You feeling good? I'm feeling nauseous and dizzy. Oh, well, Chuck,
did you happen to see somebody else who is nauseous and dizzy? Well, Jerry was last week,
and then a few more people in the office. So I just figured we all had the same thing.
All right. I'm going to diagnose this. Okay. It's called collective hysteria,
also known, I think more appropriately, as mass psychogenic disorder. I think when you add the
word hysteria to this, it takes on certain dimensions that a lot of people could find very
objectionable. Sure. Hysterics, hysteria, it's like... Dogs and cats living together?
Yeah, but I think it has a definite gender specific connotation to it from over the years.
Like women were supposedly very hysterical. So the idea of diagnosing somebody as hysterical
under any circumstances is kind of, it had amount to panning them on the head. Yeah,
here, nice lady. You're just a little hysterical. You just go calm down and bake something.
Right. Stop being crazy. No, mass psychogenic disorder instead is just kind of like, whoa,
your brain just did something pretty neat. And that is the case for mass psychogenic
disorder, if you ask me. In this article, Chuck, written by Jacob Silverman.
Jeopardy champion. Yeah, well, yeah. Yeah, you won on Jeopardy. That makes him a champion, right?
Yeah, I think so. He wasn't like the ultimate champion, but he won a couple of episodes.
Right, which is why they should have a word for, I guess, champion is the one who won at all.
Ken Jennings. Yeah, or Watson. Who's that? The IBM computer.
Yeah, sure. So Jeopardy winner Jacob Silverman wrote this article years back, and he did a
pretty great job of citing a contemporary outbreak of mass psychogenic disorder that
had been going on around that time down in Mexico, down Mexico, way in Chaco, Mexico,
at a boarding school there. It apparently was a girls boarding school. And the girls that went
to school there were ages 12 to 17. And all of a sudden, they started, well, there was an outbreak.
Yeah. A weird outbreak. There was vomiting, I believe, trouble walking. There was fever.
Yeah. That's weird. Nausea. And so the people running this boarding school were like,
what's going on? This is not good. Yeah. And they had no idea. The girls went on Christmas break
for 10 days, came back, and the thing just took off again like wildfire.
Yeah, 600 of the 3,600 girls showed these symptoms, and nobody could figure it out.
They did a lot of tests. They brought in people to check out the facilities. Because as you'll
see, there's a trend. Here in the West, they start to blame it usually on environmental poisoning
of some kind. Right. There's some sort of toxin in the present that has poisoned everybody.
But they didn't find anything there. And eventually, they said this is, what'd you call it?
Psychosomatic mass psychogenic disorder. Okay. Mass psychogenic disorder.
But no, that is one of the names. Mass psychogenic disorder, collective hysteria,
mass hysteria, or mass psychosomatic reaction. Yeah. They're all saying the same thing.
They are. Which is you're not, well, I'm about to say you're not really sick. But that is not
exactly true, because that's one thing that differentiates this from something that's just
in your head, is you actually do manifest physical symptoms. Right. Yeah. There's this
article written by a MD named Timothy F. Jones from the Tennessee Department of Health way back
in the heady days of 2000, the year 2000, the future. Wow. And he writes that if you are experiencing
mass psychogenic disorder, it is not just in your head that the symptoms that you have are
actually very real. Even though there's no toxic cause, they couldn't find some sort of
environmental poisoning or anything like that. The symptoms are extremely real. Yeah. It's just
psychosomatic. It's just basically the brain has been tricked into causing this response.
Yeah. And this has happened. They've documented about 80 cases throughout history. And apparently,
the National Institutes of Health gets about two cases per week reported. But which is,
I mean, that's way more common than you would think. Yeah. I would think there'd be more than
80, because I mean, these have happened. If you go back and look at, I mean, there's all sorts
of crazy lists on the internet about these cases that date back to like the 14th century. Medieval
dancing mania was one of them. Yeah. The dancing plague. Yeah. Yeah. That's in there. The Salem
witchcraft trials. Sure. Or the Salem witchcraft, I guess what led to the trials was supposedly
attributed to this kind of thing. Yeah. One weird thing about this condition is more times than not,
it affects females. Yeah. And young females even more specifically, teenagers or even younger.
Which is, as far as it goes right now, inexplicable. And it's kind of a prickly issue. Like, again,
you kind of come back to the idea of calling it hysteria. Yeah. You know, the fact that it does tend
to afflict women or girls more than boys is apparently one means of diagnosing psychogenic
disorder, mass psychogenic disorder. Yeah. That's like one of the first things we'll say is like,
all this sickness is happening in this place, the school, wherever. And the doctor will say,
is it a bunch of girls? Yeah. And then that will clue them in that, hey, this might be what we're
dealing with here. But the problem is, is no one has any idea why. And there have been explanations
of things like, I guess, girls, this is girls' culturally acceptable outlet for raging against
the patriarchy. Sure. Even if they don't necessarily feel that that's what they're doing,
this is the symptoms of that. That's one. Yeah. I thought this is a pretty interesting part.
What article? Was that from Slate? There was, yeah, one called Masseteria in upstate New York
by Ruth Graham was on Slate. That was a good one. It was a really good one. We'll get to that case
in a sec. But I thought it was pretty interesting. In one part, it says, and this is a quote from
someone writing about something and said, in form, if not in conscious intent, it is to protest the
sexual repressiveness, rigid double standard of female teen culture. But they were writing about
beetle mania, which is interesting because it sort of has a similar vibe of young ladies being
repressed, not having an outlet. And so they see the beetles and they go berserk and faint and cry
and scream collectively. Whereas boys, they're more prone to just act out if they're not feeling
good. Girls are trained to keep things inward. And they also point out that ladies and young ladies
are more prone to seek a doctor's help for something. They say that may account for the bias
right there. Like guys just won't go to the doctor. Exactly. You have to be careful, though, in just
diagnosing mass psychogenic disorder. You physicians out there who are listening that
encounter a case like this, just by basing it on the fact that it is affecting more girls than boys
because there's at least one case in Great Britain where I think girls were afflicted by more than
half, more than double the number of girls were afflicted by this. And it turned out that there
were tainted cucumbers being served in the lunch room. Yeah. And everyone knows boys hate cucumbers.
And so, I mean, this is one of the issues with dealing with mass psychogenic disorder
in that it looks and acts a lot like some sort of weird epidemic that basically it looks like
either something like bioterrorism. Yeah. A rapidly spreading infection or affection
if it's fetal mania. Yeah. And then acute toxic exposure. That's what it looks like. It's like
one person gets sick. This is your index case. Yeah. And all of a sudden, everyone around them
suddenly has the same symptoms. Yeah. And it's like you said, it's super dangerous to just dismiss
that as, oh, it's all in your head, silly little ladies. You can't do that because what if it is
something for real? But it's also a double-edged sword, as that doctor pointed out. You start
ordering batteries of tests and it can go both ways. What the old saying is, if you order enough
tests, you're going to find something. Right. So it can fuel that fire, but you also can't
not run any tests and just dismiss it. So it's a very fine line that physicians walk when dealing
with stuff like this for sure. Indeed. Apparently, study of mass psychogenic disorder has found that
it's more prevalent in isolated communities and in situations where there are highly rigid,
formalized, structured rules like a Catholic school in Mexico. Exactly. Yeah. Or again, Salem,
Massachusetts in the 17th century. Yeah. And apparently between 1973 and 1993, half of all
the outbreaks of psychogenic illness took place in schools. Oh, yeah. So that's possibly in part by
due to kids being susceptible to it more. Right. But also because of that rigid, formalized structure.
Yeah. And there's also usually a top-down effect like it'll start with a teacher or an older student
and then the younger students follow suit, which if you're talking influence would make sense for
sure. There was one very famous case. Apparently, there's not very many actual academic studies on
this. But there's one that came out of the New England Journal of Medicine that described a case
in 1998 in Tennessee where a teacher noticed some weird gas odor, a gassy odor, like the chemical
kind. Yeah, not like the guy on the front row tuted. Right, exactly. And she apparently started
suffering symptoms. And all of a sudden, like 180 students and teachers had to go to the emergency
room. The school was shut down for two weeks. They did all this environmental testing, couldn't
find anything, and finally traced it back to a mass psychogenic disorder. That's what did it.
And then everyone, in most of these cases, we should point out everyone starts feeling better.
Yes. Like in Mexico, and then the school in Tennessee, it's not like they went on to die or
anything. Yeah, so in the school in Mexico, these girls were at a boarding school. Yeah. They were
only allowed to see their parents, I think, like three times a year. Yeah, they couldn't even call.
It's like, it sounds more like a prison. Right, no phone calls. They were allowed letters. When
they went home, immediately their symptoms cleared up. Yeah. The problem is that doesn't
automatically say, oh, well, it's obviously mass psychogenic disorder. It could be an
environmental toxin that they're being exposed to still at the school and we're removed from,
but I think the definite prognosis is mass psychogenic disorder in this case. That's right.
Do you ever think to yourself, what advice would Lance Bass and my favorite boy bands give me
in this situation? If you do, you've come to the right place because I'm here to help. This,
I promise you. Oh, God. Seriously, I swear. And you won't have to send an SOS because
I'll be there for you. Oh, man. And so my husband, Michael, um, hey, that's me. Yep,
we know that Michael and a different hot sexy teen crush boy band are each week to guide you through
life step by step. Oh, not another one. Kids, relationships, life in general can get messy.
You may be thinking this is the story of my life. Just stop now. If so, tell everybody,
yeah, everybody about my new podcast and make sure to listen so we'll never ever have to say bye,
bye, bye. Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass on the iHeart radio app, Apple podcast or wherever
you listen to podcasts. I'm Mangesh Atikular. And to be honest, I don't believe in astrology,
but from the moment I was born, it's been a part of my life in India. It's like smoking. You might
not smoke, but you're going to get secondhand astrology. And lately, I've been wondering if
the universe has been trying to tell me to stop running and pay attention because maybe there
is magic in the stars. If you're willing to look for it. So I rounded up some friends and we dove
in and let me tell you, it got weird fast. Tantric curses, Major League Baseball teams, canceled
marriages, K-pop. But just when I thought I had a handle on this sweet and curious show about astrology,
my whole world came crashing down. Situation doesn't look good. There is risk to father.
And my whole view on astrology, it changed. Whether you're a skeptic or a believer,
I think your ideas are going to change too. Listen to Skyline Drive and the iHeart Radio app,
Apple Podcast, or wherever you get your podcasts.
So the no-cebo effect, we talked about that in what? The placebo effect.
Oh, well, that makes sense. I was trying to be more clever. I thought we were more clever than
that. No-cebo, I think we said in that other podcast too, is Latin for I shall harm. And that's
basically, whereas you take a placebo thinking it's going to help you out and it does help you out
because the mind is powerful. The no-cebo effect is thinking something bad will result. Like,
my teacher's getting sick. I think I feel a little sick too. And then, oh wait, my neighbor's feeling
a little sick. I think I'm feeling a little sick too. Or this drug trial that I'm on. I was told
that I could possibly get some sort of gastrointestinal distress. Yeah. And even though I've been
given a sugar pill, I'm now going, yeah, because of my mind, because of the no-cebo effect.
There was a famous experiment or case from 1886 where there was a woman who had a rose allergy
and they showed her an artificial rose and she began to, I guess it was convincing. And she began
to have her allergic reaction and they said, aha, it's fake and you're faking. And she said, oh,
well, I think I'm feeling better now. And supposedly that cured her of her real allergy
to real roses. Right. I couldn't find a lot to back that up, but it is a story.
Yeah. Well, no, that's a, I mean, it was in, I can't remember the journal, but it was a real deal
thing. And I didn't get to the bottom of why they presented this woman with a fake rose or
whatever, but they definitely did and this definitely happened. And even the author of
the study was saying like, this woman, she wasn't faking. It was like she had real symptoms.
Sure. Hives are hives. Exactly. You can see those. I think they call it like a rose cold
or something like that. You can get stuffy, your eyes are watering, your nose is running,
that kind of thing. And what's interesting is some researchers have studied the nocebo effect
and they basically have isolated this chemical that gets released when the nocebo effects
going on. And again, we should say it's not just making your nose runny or releasing histamines
or anything like that. It's pain too. Like you can experience pain even though nothing's
there to give you pain. Right. Just because of the nocebo effect. What they found was a,
a, I guess a hormone, I believe. Are you ready? I'm going to try this one.
Colicistokinin. That sounds great. Thanks man. I haven't looked at the word, but it sounds right.
Colicistokinin. Yeah. Do you see it now? Oh yeah. That's totally right. I totally did. So it's a
hormone, right? And it gets released and it actually, it helps you experience pain. So it's
a nasty little hormone. Yeah. But they found in testing with the nocebo effect that if you block
this, you can also block the nocebo effect. So that proves two things. Does that block pain though?
Yes. Like your pain receptors? Yes. So does that mean if you slam your hand in the door,
you won't feel it? If you can block this. Wow. Yes. So if you can block Colicistokinin. Right.
Yes. It will keep you from hypersensitivity to pain, I believe. Yeah. And this guy named Fabrizio
Benedetti, who I think was also in the strokes back in 1997. There was a Fabrizio, right? Yeah. He
was testing out the nocebo effect and found that if he told people that he was giving them an
injection, which is, it's a pretty cruel test, but effective. Yeah. These post-op people who had
just come out of surgery were given an injection and told this injection is going to increase your
pain in 30 minutes. I'm sorry, we have to give it to you. It's part of the procedure. Right. He gave
some people an injection of saline and they reported an increase in pain. And they all went
behind the two-way mirror and laughed? Right. They're like, what? It's chump. You look at them
riding. 30 minutes. Yeah. And then they gave somebody like the other group, the control group,
a chemical, an injection that blocks that pain, but they were told that it was going to
increase their pain. Right. But they were given a chemical that blocks colosistokinin and the
nocebo effect didn't take place. They didn't report an increase in pain. Even though they were told
they would. Yes. Wow. So this guy's saying like the nocebo effect is real. Yeah. Like when they
say it's not just in your head, you're experiencing the same thing as if you're experiencing somebody
stabbing you. Well, what it is real. Exactly. That's when you have to start asking yourself
those deep philosophical questions. Right. Interesting. There's another case that's,
have you ever seen the movie Safe, the Todd Haynes movie with Julianne Moore? No. It's from like
the mid-90s and she played a lady that started to have environmental sickness just in the air.
And she's got sort of like increasingly crazy as the movie went on, as far as scrubbing things and
locking yourself in her house and making her house a clean environment. Sounds great.
It was good. And there's a true story though of a lady in London named Debbie Bird. She's a
health spa manager that says that she's allergic to EMF, electromagnetic fields. And it's an
actual thing now. There's more than her claiming it's called ES, electromagnetic sensitivity,
where she has basically transformed her house. She painted it black. She said she's allergic to
computers, cell phones, microwaves. She had her house rewired to make it basically EMF free.
She and her husband sleep under a silver-plated mosquito net to keep out radio waves and covered
all her windows with protective films. And she said she's feeling a lot better now.
So I saw that ES, electromagnetic sensitivity, that if you expose somebody to an electromagnetic
field and then just tell them that you are and don't, they have the same reaction,
which would suggest that it's nocebo. Well, it's super fascinating because you see cases like this
from that to like gluten sensitivity becoming a big thing now. And some people contend that,
well, it's maybe a collective hysteria going on. And if you think you're going to be sensitive to
gluten, then you're going to be sensitive to things that contain gluten. And I'm not saying
that, people, because that's a very hot topic. Sure it is. But some people have claimed that.
Well, we'll talk a little bit more about things that exacerbate the mass psychogenic disorder
and the nocebo effect right after this. Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast,
Frosted Tips with Lance Bass. The hardest thing can be knowing who to turn to when
questions arise or times get tough or you're at the end of the road. Okay, I see what you're doing.
Do you ever think to yourself, what advice would Lance Bass and my favorite boy bands
give me in this situation? If you do, you've come to the right place because I'm here to help.
This, I promise you. Oh, God. Seriously, I swear. And you won't have to send an SOS because I'll be
there for you. Oh, man. And so my husband, Michael. Um, hey, that's me. Yep, we know that, Michael.
And a different hot, sexy teen crush boy bander each week to guide you through life step by step.
Oh, not another one. Kids, relationships, life in general can get messy. You may be thinking,
this is the story of my life. Just stop now. If so, tell everybody, everybody about my
new podcast and make sure to listen. So we'll never ever have to say bye, bye, bye. Listen to
Frosted Tips with Lance Bass on the iHeart Radio app, Apple podcast, or wherever you listen to podcasts.
I'm Mangesh Atikular. And to be honest, I don't believe in astrology. But from the moment I was
born, it's been a part of my life in India. It's like smoking. You might not smoke, but you're
going to get secondhand astrology. And lately, I've been wondering if the universe has been
trying to tell me to stop running and pay attention. Because maybe there is magic in the stars,
if you're willing to look for it. So I rounded up some friends and we dove in and
let me tell you, it got weird fast. Tantric curses, major league baseball teams, canceled marriages,
K-pop. But just when I thought I had to handle on this sweet and curious show about astrology,
my whole world came crashing down. Situation doesn't look good. There is risk to father.
And my whole view on astrology, it changed. Whether you're a skeptic or a believer,
I think your ideas are going to change too. Listen to Skyline Drive and the iHeart Radio app,
Apple Podcast, or wherever you get your podcasts. So Chuck, back in 2007 in New Zealand,
a drug called L-Troxen. It was a pretty widespread drug in New Zealand. It's a hormone replacement
drug. And it was the only one that the government would pay for. So most people who were on this
hormone replacement therapy were using L-Troxen and it had been that way for decades. It was just
an established drug. GlaxoSmithKline, what was it for though? Hormone replacement. GlaxoSmithKline,
I think just those, there's no welcome involved, changed just the outer, the inert qualities
of it, like the shape of the pill, the color. And I think that's about it. But the active ingredient
was exactly the same in 2007. And when they released it, all of a sudden, some reports of bad side
effects were starting to trickle in. And the government was like, wait, what's going on here?
It got a little bit of media attention and more reports started trickling in. And then the media
attention grew and the reports grew and grew. And apparently the reporting of adverse effects of
L-Troxen increased 2,000-fold in a year and a half. Because of the look of the pill? Because of the
look of the pill. They went back and studied this and they found that in areas where there was more
reporting about these adverse effects being reported for L-Troxen, the more adverse effects
were being reported in that area. And that kind of reveals one of the risk factors for
mass psychogenic disorder is the media. It's actually spread through the media most easily.
They have a point, though. I know in this article, too, it points out that pills that are blue and
green are usually associated with drowsiness. Pills that are orange or yellow are not. And
I don't know if that's why they market it that way or if it's the opposite. We just see it that
way because of products like Nyquil and Dayquil. But the one that makes you sleepy is green and
blue and the one that keeps you awake but doesn't make you drowsy is orange.
I thought about it. I mean, what do you associate with daytime, sunrise, yellow, orange, red?
It definitely makes sense.
What do you associate with nighttime? Something like tranquil, blue, scotch, amber.
That's what I think it came from. I think the pills came after the association,
rather than the other way around. I think when I get a prescription for something,
when I see the pill, I make a judgment on it before I've even had it just by saying,
look at that thing. That's a horse pill or that's a capsule with powdery stuff inside that's
different than the chalky one. I think you just make an association. I don't think I have any
preconceived notions on what a larger pill will do to me or a capsule will do to me
other than a tablet. But I think it's interesting though, how you make these judgment calls.
But without even thinking about it.
Yeah, totally.
You probably don't sit there and look at a pill in your hand. You just take it and just make some
sort of almost unconscious judgments about it.
Yeah. It may remind you of another pill that helped you that you're not even remembering.
Exactly. So that would be placebo. That's great.
Yeah. No sebo effect. Not great. Puzzle. No, and it puzzles a lot of problems. For instance,
there was a study I think in the 90s that found that women who believed that they were prone to
heart disease were four times likelier to die of heart disease than women who didn't
believe they were prone to it, even though they had all the exact same risk factors,
basically the same risk factors. There was nothing differentiating these women aside
from a belief that they were going to die from heart disease or a belief that they weren't.
And that led to a four-fold increase in deaths from that. Just basically from a belief is
what it suggests.
Yeah. Well, it's sort of like the, I know it's kind of cheesy, but the PMA, the positive mental
attitude, I think we've all know someone who walks around saying, oh, so and so sick. Oh,
I know I'm going to get it. I just know I'm going to get sick. Or I just know I'm going to get cancer
because it runs in my family. That, I think that has an effect on things.
I have to agree. I know some of our more skeptical listeners who are pulling their hair out right
now, but I totally agree with you. When we did our show in Toronto on the way back,
Yumi and I flowed a buffalo. And I was feeling a little down, but like at the point where
I feel like you can talk yourself into staying healthy, positive mental attitude,
I guess is what you call it. PMA. But we were leaving right at about dusk and the sun was just
beaming through the windows and illuminating every single microbe, visible microbe in the air.
Yeah. I could see them like just going into my nose and my mouth and I'm like, oh no. I couldn't
stop. Like I couldn't, I was like, I'm not going to get sick. I'm not going to get sick. And man,
did I ever get sick. Yeah. But I noticed that right when we took off and no, you know what it was,
somebody shut one of their, their window covers. Yeah. Yeah. The shade. Shade exactly is the word
that I was looking for. Somebody shut their shade and I couldn't see it anymore. And I immediately
started to feel less symptomatic. Wow. Immediately. It was like turning off a light. Yeah. And I still
got sick, but I was just drowning in basically what my brain was interpreting is like being assaulted
by foreign invaders, which I am all the time, but I normally can't see them. Yeah. Well, I've done,
I do that all the time when I open my curtains in the bedroom and I'll see you in the morning.
I'll see that stuff in the air. And I just think, oh man, that's what I'm walking around. Right.
Breathing in. Breathing. Yeah. Dog hair and cat hair and Emily hair. So your lungs are just chock
full of it. So one of the, one of the problems this poses Chuck for physicians is that we expect
doctors or we want doctors to be transparent, to not lie to us. Yeah. We've talked a lot about
this lately, I feel like. Yeah. We've talked a lot about diseases. Some of our hypochondriac
listeners have been like, please stop talking about diseases. Sorry. Because now I've got
morgolons. Right. I'm going to have like some sort of toxic exposure. Yeah. Toxic
osmosis. Yeah. And then very soon, liposy. Spoiler. So the problem is, is if you tell somebody
that's going into surgery, hey, by the way, you know, you might have trouble walking. Yeah.
You might feel nauseous for the next six months. You, like all this stuff that could be associated
with, which we demand from our doctors. Yeah. It's been shown that if you are fearful or in
despair going into surgery, that's associated with longer healing times and a higher risk of
postoperative infection. Yeah. Right. So if you have the nocebo effect where doctors are saying,
okay, if I tell somebody, and it's been proven time after time that in drug trials, people who are
still are given placebo will drop out of drug trials because they're experiencing these negative
side effects even though they're given the sugar pill. Right. So if you're a doctor and you know
that you are telling somebody something that ultimately may end up harming them and you've
sworn an oath to do no harm, you've got a conundrum going on right now. Yeah. And that's what the
nocebo effect poses. It's the problem the nocebo effect poses for modern physicians. Like how
much should they tell you if you're going to tell somebody that they're going to feel nauseous for
six months, even though they probably won't, should you tell them and give them a chance to
basically have the psychosomatic symptom? Or tell them they're going to feel great.
Well, that's another one. Somebody says the solution to this is just frame it differently.
Right. Like don't say there's a chance you're going to have nausea for six months. Say
half of a percent of patients who go through the same procedure that you're about to go through
have nausea for six months. 99.5 percent don't. Right. You're giving them the same information.
It's just frame more positively. Yeah. And that one doctor who wrote the article on
collectivist area said what he recommends is not naming the illness. Yeah. He said that can help
out because as soon as you give something a name, then it just instantly, you know, you have something
you can call it and everyone's calling it that or the media picks up on it. Right. And it's a thing.
Yeah. And that's actually, again, one of the, one of the risk factors in the spread of mass
psychogenic illness is the larger the response, the emergency medical response to it. Yeah.
And then hence the larger the media response to it, the larger the outbreak tends to be.
It's called line of sight exposure. Yeah. Just knowing somebody is sick or seeing somebody sick
can give you the same symptoms. I'm sure if you see a news story that all the other news
agencies are running that says there's been some weird chemical leak in the air in Atlanta,
people are going to start walking around and coughing. Right. And saying, I'm not feeling
so good. I have a bitter taste in my mouth. There's microbes everywhere. Well, here's a case
from that article you sent that I think is super fascinating, the one in upstate New York. Yeah.
Because it is not a rash or a cough or nausea. It is Tourette syndrome, a 16 year old young
lady named Lori Bronwell. What year was this? A couple of years ago? Yeah. Not too long ago.
I think 2012. And Corinth, New York was at her school's homecoming dance in lost consciousness.
This is after she had banged at a concert. Sorry, man. I thought you were going to leave out
like the best part. Yeah. She was head banging at a concert. I wish I knew what concert that was.
Me too. I didn't find it anywhere. Apparently passed out there and had passing outfits
involuntary twitching and clapping started twisting her hair, fluttering her fingers.
Hey, hey, hey, starting stuff like that. Yeah. And the doctor said, you know what? You've got
Tourette syndrome. So Tourette syndrome is, we've had a podcast on it. It's a real thing. It's
not psychosomatic. But since that time, 14 other students, along with her, 13 girls and one boy
started exhibiting at LaRoy Junior High School, I'm sorry, Junior Senior High School, started
coming down with Tourette's. Right, which is not contagious. It is not contagious at all.
Erin Brockovich got on the case. Famous environmental activist. And she said, no,
I think this has got to do with this train derailment from 1970 that dumped cyanide all over
this town. And I didn't see where they found any legitimate effects. Right. Again, that's the
confounding thing about mass psychogenic disorder is that it is still possible that there is some
weird toxin in the environment that is causing this. Like maybe there was exposure to cyanide
that got in these people's brains and all gave them Tourette. And if you stand back and look at
it, you're like Tourette syndrome isn't contagious. That doesn't mean that you can't all come down
with Tourette syndrome from exposure to a toxin. It's just still, it's this X factor that's out
there that you can't just necessarily rule out. Yeah. And I believe in that case too,
those 14 students didn't end up with Tourette syndrome. That was a good episode, man.
I loved Tourette syndrome one. Yeah. That's an oldie. Yeah. Oldie but a goodie.
And it all came from headbanging. That's how it started. That mess. At a Nickelback show.
Yeah. Cause Corinth is near Canada. Canada doesn't let Nickelback out any longer. Oh,
really? Are they caged in there? Yeah. Nice. There's another case of the toxic lady. Do you
hear this one? In Riverside, California, a woman named Gloria Ramirez. Yeah. She was dubbed the
toxic lady in 1994. She had cervical cancer and was being treated and all the medical staff
started to get sick that was treating her. This sounds gross, but they said her body exuded a
garlicky fruity smell and her blood had flecks of what looked like paper, which sounds kind of
like morgulons actually. Nice. You like that? Yeah. And they said that most of the people that
got sick while treating her were women, more women than men. And they all took a blood test and came
back normal and the health department said mass hysteria. So that's funny because I looked,
I remembered that story and I was like, I wonder if that was mass hysteria. And I looked it up and I
found that no, it was an environmental toxic. Oh, it was? That's what I found. So they called it
mass hysteria at the time and then later found out. I think like a year or two later, she was using
some sort of SAV or something on her skin. Interesting. And they think that an interactive
with her biochemistry and really did produce a toxic gas. She said it may be this fruit garlic
SAV. Right, exactly. That's interacting badly with my pancreas. Oh, well, this list needs to be
updated. That is a fascinating case. It is. People got really sick from that. I think I
remember hearing about that too. Well, I'm glad they found a real cause in that case. From what
I understand, but that's the point. You can say, well, obviously there's women who are more
effective than men, right? Well, is that because there's more women in the nursing profession
and there were more nurses in the room? Yeah, maybe. There's a lot of different things you
have to take into account before you just write it off. Sometimes it is real like sick building
syndrome. Yeah. That's a tough one because in after the OPEC oil embargo, apparently people
started designing buildings to be more airtight. So your ventilation ventilation system was really
important. Yeah. And these buildings haven't aged necessarily very well. So the ventilation system
is not doing what it's supposed to any longer. And so they think possibly that's leading to what
we know as sick building syndrome, which is malaise. It's when you don't feel good when you go to
work. Exactly. Which is everybody. But some studies have found like, no, that is the better
predictor of sick building syndrome is job stress or job dissatisfaction. Yeah. If you have a building
full of people who don't like their jobs, you're going to have a building full of people with sick
building syndrome. But if you go on to say like a local government's website or whatever and you
look at sick building syndrome, it's treated as a real thing. Yeah. Well, it definitely affects
your gastrointestinal like stress does. Well, also apparently it can set off bouts of asthma. Yeah.
Which is another reason why they think it might have something to do with like volatile organic
compounds in the ventilation system or new carpeting, that kind of stuff. Yeah. Off-gassing,
man. You smell that stuff when you open up a new product, right? Yeah. There's also the dancing
plague, which we mentioned briefly. Tell me about it. Fralle Trophia, July 14th, 1518,
went out on the streets of Strasbourg, France and started dancing, even though there was no music
and dancing like a maniac for three straight days and all these people started dancing with her.
Yeah. Saying this is a good time. Said within a month, 100 people were dancing with her and
couldn't stop and hyperventilating, hallucinating, some drop dead of heart attack and stroke and
exhaustion and the authority said, let's just hire a band and let them dance it out because
they've got the hot blood is what they called it. All right. And so they did and a lot of people
died as a result. It said 400 people in the end were struck. I don't think they died, but were
dancers. Right. And then it just stopped. And that's when they blame, a lot of people blame
on ergot poisoning, which we've mentioned before. Always go with ergot poisoning. Yeah, back then.
Those people were clearly tripping on something. They got the hot blood. But what it sounds like
you just described is basically how Tom Hanks invented jogging in the 70s. Yogging? Yeah. Oh,
yeah. He just started running and people started following him. I wish that part had been cut out
of that movie. Oh, really? Yeah. I thought that it was a weird thing that should have been on the
editing room floor. They really kind of derailed things for a while for me. Yeah. I don't think
that movie's aged well, though. I haven't seen it in forever. Other people say, though, that it was
Sid and Ham's chorea, disorder linked to strep throat and rheumatic fever that causes dance
like twitches. And then, of course, modern medical historians say it was mass psychosis. I would go
with that one. Yeah, but back then it made more sense, though, when during the Salem witch trials
and before they knew anything about medicine and you could just say you got the hot blood
or you're having the fits. Or the devil's possessed you? Yeah, exactly. These modern cases,
the ones that really freak me out because so much is explainable now. Here's the thing,
though, Chuck. We've always explained it with something that comes easily to mind. So,
back in the day before science and medicine, it was the devil possessing you. And don't think
that people weren't freaked out when they thought that the devil was there in town possessing people
in the same way that you're freaked out by the idea that it's cyanide in the soil
from a train derailment from 1970. Or betel mania. It's just exactly, which is the deadliest of all
the manias. But it's just as real to the experiencer. And it all comes down to people just basically
being sick of the establishment and letting loose for a while. Don't want to go to work.
Nice. So, I'll dance. You got anything else? No, sir. If you want to know more about collective
hysteria, which is the name of this article, type those words in the search bar at howstuffworks.com
and it will bring it up. And I said search bar, which means it's time for listener mail.
I'm going to call this episode on grief. We got a lot of great feedback and they continue to roll
in. Hey, guys, just stumbled upon your podcast through my tune in radio app. I guess that's
a mini plug. We're available there now. I've devoured almost all of the 600 plus shows.
I may be a new listener, but I'm already a lifelong fan. So, what I'm writing in guys is,
I lost my twin sister back in 2010. It was a rough time because as a fraternal twin,
me being the boy, I looked at her not only as a sister, but as a mother and friend too.
Long story short, I wanted to comment on the grief show some time ago. I've dealt with my grief
through my artwork. I'm a small town artist from Johnson City, Tennessee, and I rarely can get noticed
or any attention with my art. I wanted to share my new piece. I've just finished after listening
to how comic books work. I'm a huge fan of Marvel Comics, and I hope you both enjoy this.
And he sent this really cool, I think it was like every member of the Marvel universe had to be in
this picture that he did. I didn't see that one. It was really, really neat, just jam-packed full
of Marvel comic heroes and villains. So, Josh and Chuck, thanks for the inspiration laughs
and getting through every day at the office. PS, my twin Jessica, passed away from epilepsy,
actually, a condition called SUDEP, Sudden Unexplained Death of Epilepsy. My mother is trying
to raise awareness because November is Epilepsy Awareness Month. So, if you guys wouldn't mind
mentioning this on the show, she would be so happy for that. Also, an epilepsy show would be cool too.
Not a lot is discussed about it, and that is Jason Flack. And Jason, I wrote you back that is
heartbreaking about your twin sister. Very sorry to hear that. And we will definitely do a show
on epilepsy. And since this is November, though, people should go out and find out what they can
during National Epilepsy Month. We'll follow up with the show. I don't know if it'll be in November,
but we'll get to that one for sure. And thanks for that piece of art. And if anyone's interested
in a great comic book artist from Johnson City, Tennessee, do a lot worse than Jason Flack.
Jason, thank you very much for sharing that with everybody. That means a lot to us.
If you want to share with us and all of our listeners out there, you can tweet to us at
syskpodcast. You can join us on facebook.com. You can send us an email with attached artwork
to stuffpodcast.howstuffworks.com. And as always, join us at our home on the web, stuffyoushouldknow.com.
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