Hoopoe
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
Both the PACE authors and Larun et al. have argued that bias due to lack of blinding is not really a big concern because patients don't like GET. In the PACE-trial expectations for GET were no higher than for APT. I suspect researchers might use such measurements of expectations before the trial to argue that bias due to lack of blinding is not really a big concern.
Going from memory, in PACE the expectations for GET and APT were not different, but this was at baseline. Using this to claim that expectation bias was not a concern implies also claiming that the different treatments received later infused exactly the same expectations in participants, which seems rather dubious.
At the time, CBT/GET was already recommended by health authorities as most effective treatment and it promised a cure. The illness model of CBT/GET describes reducing activities in response to symptoms (an integral part of pacing) as maladaptive behaviour. Therapists would probably favor CBT/GET simply because it provided more job opportunities (pacing is usually not therapist delivered, and I think at the time CBT/GET was already available on the NHS).
Last edited: