I think we need to be careful not to make inappropriate criticisms based on this release of information - a comment not necessarily directed at
@trishrhymes.
The numbers are small and perhaps incomplete (nothing about dropouts) simply because this is what was asked for (documented changes - other baselines were not asked for) This was not a study as I understand it. It is just release of clinical information. I suspect that it was authorised by a helpful clinician who may be as sceptical about exercise therapy as any of us. We should not expect any placebo effect or massaging of data here because we have no indication that these are data designed to prove a point. They are just logs of clinical progress. They might be overoptimistic or over pessimistic. This is probably the only test used because the NHS is grossly overstretched and there is no justification for doing anything more - or even this. For individual treatments measuring the benefit is not necessary. If there was improvement then the patient will know. Presumably this is an attempt at some sort of audit for internal purposes. That might include wishful thinking but maybe the clinician is noting the modest nature of the improvement and wondering how they can find something better. Nobody managing ME/CFS at UCLH that I know of is under any illusion that exercise cures it. They are keen to find something that works.
If we are going to criticise PACE for being uninterpretable then surely we should accept that these data are even more completely uninterpretable - either way - as indicators of treatment efficacy. Those who live in orchards should not cherry pick!!
I take your points,
@Jonathan Edwards. You are right to point out this is not a study, but data recorded, probably for internal audit. I guess my main criticism, recognising that funding is tight, and time is limited, would be that the 6 minute walk test is not a useful or valid test for finding out whether the 'treatment' is working, for the reasons I stated. I therefore wonder why they chose this particular test as their audit measure.
Given funding limitations, I can see that they cannot supply all patients with an actometer like a fitbit, or carry out 2 day CPET tests, but you can buy simple pedometers for about £5. These could be handed out at the first visit and patients asked to wear them and write down their daily totals along with a simple numerical score rating the level of their ME symptoms.
This would at least have the benefit of seeing whether patients are actually changing their behaviours and enable both patients and clinicians to assess the effects of increased activity over the time period of their treatment. Weekly averages of these scores could be calculated and plotted as a graph for each patient, so they and the therapist can see at a glance the pattern of activity and symptoms. This is something the patients could be shown how to do for themselves, enabling them to monitor their progress after the 6 week course is finished.
When my daughter attended group sessions for ME patients run by OT's some years ago, she was asked to fill in daily activity diaries and hand them in. There was no feedback from this, so it seemed entirely pointless, and she found it arduous and unhelpful. Writing down two numbers (steps and symptom score) at the end of each day would have been far more manageable and useful both to her and to the people running the 'treatment'.