Good points.I suspect the reason Knoop used +/- 1SD is that he was looking at recovery, not norms. It would be hard to argue that the threshold for recovery included those between -1 & -2 SD (bottom 2.5%-16% of the population) since peope with CFS were unlikely to be there en masse before they got ill. More reasonable to set the recovery threshold a little higher, hence -1SD, though that's just speculation on my part.
As Biophile points out, SDs for a healthy population - which is more homogenous by definition - are smaller than for the full population. From what I've seen, the mean for SF36 PF is around 95for a working age healthy population with SD around 10, which would give >=75 as 'normal' and >=85 as recovered.Hope this helps.
Personally, I think thresholds should be set individually: why should the threshold for recovery be the same for somebody who is 20 and somebody who is 60. Similarly, for some measures, I think thresholds should be broken down by gender. This process could either be automated using a program or else done individually, which again wouldn't take particularly long.
It may (or may not) be for this reason that the mean+(-)1SD method was used i.e. mean [mixed sample of all ages]-1SD is likely to be mean-2SD, for all the different means for different ages.
Personally, I don't like the mean+(-)1SD: (extending the point oceanblue made) a recovered group shouldn't be mostly or all "worse" than the mean: there should roughly the same better than normal as there are a bit worse than normal. The way to test this is to get the mean and standard deviation of the recovered group and see if it's significantly different from a healthy group. If it is, it suggests it's not a proper recovered group.