As mentioned, CFS patients in specialist settings frequently
have strong physical attributions and are skeptical about psy-
chological and psychiatric treatments. Concurrently, expecta-
tion is the key component of the placebo effect. The present
review provides some evidence to link these two established
research findings. Psychological-psychiatric interventions
showed a lower placebo response, possibly because of pa-
tients’ lower expectations.
Perhaps the psychologic interventions have lower placebo response because the patients are unblinded. For example,
Prins 2001 had one of the lower placebo responses at 8.5%. Their methods demonstrate how it's obvious who is getting treatment.
93 were randomly assigned CBT (administered by 13 therapists recently trained in this technique for CFS), 94 were assigned the support-group approach, and 91 the control natural course
However the authors designed the paper, or retroactively wrote it, so that the either outcome would satisfy their conclusions about CFS. For the first part they say
Placebos seem to work best in highly subjective symptoms
usually lacking identifiable physiologic correlates, in chronic
conditions with a fluctuating nature often influenced by pa-
tients’ selective attention, and in affective disorders (21,22).
so that if placebo response is high, it can be concluded that the condition is varying on patients thoughts, behaviors and expected symptoms [non identifiable physiologic correlates]. But then they found placebo response was low, and so added
...some sufferers equally
vehemently reject psychological causation and with it psycho-
logical treatments. It is this that gives us an opportunity to test
the role of expectation in the placebo response. Thus, inter-
ventions based on the assumption of physical causality were
hypothesized to have a high placebo effect and those based on
the psychological assumption a low effect.
O.K., but, he's neglected to mention that in the CBT/GET treatments patients know, and those treating them know, who is getting the treatment. So, since the placebo response carries more than just the placebo effect, it seems unreasonable to compare it to blinded "physical" treatments unless both physical and cbt/get were both unblinded or both blinded.
I hope that makes sense, I even got a little confused writing this. For example of one bias difference, if the CBT treatments are unblinded, a patient would be less inclined to "please" the researcher by reporting a better outcome. Whereas a patient who thinks they got a real treatment would still have this desire to please. So it may be that the lower placebo responses don't have anything to do with belief in physical illness just poorly conducted studies.