I was wondering if the investigators are correct here as I cannot see any issue with their argument or am I missing something?
From the New York Times article: "The investigators had weakened their outcome measures from their trial protocol so much that participants could actually deteriorate on physical function and still qualify as “recovered.” Thirteen percent
entered the trial already having met the definition of “recovered” on that measure. The investigators have argued that this didn’t matter since participants also had to meet additional recovery criteria."
As far as I understand trial participants had to have a physical function score of 65 or less to qualify for entry to the trial, and were only considered recovered if they met several criteria simultaneously- fatigue and physical function in the normal range (physical function>or=60), plus rating themselves as much or very much better, plus no longer meeting the Oxford CFS criteria which included having a physical function score of 70 or more, so there was no overlap between entry and recovery criteria for physical function.(although there was an overlap between what was considered physical function in the normal range and what was necessary for trial entry).
I think of it as a bit akin to taking a very poorly car in for much needed repairs. The engine is running incredibly badly with not much power, the brakes are binding and holding the car back all the time; the tyres are ancient and almost flat so they really drag; the clutch is slipping so what little power the engine does develop is not all getting to gearbox anyway.
So you take it into the garage and they tell you up front that you will know when they have recovered your car to its working state, because: The engine will be repaired and working properly again; the brakes will be freed up and no longer slowing the car down; the tyres will be sorted and pumped up so they only have their designed rolling resistance; the clutch will be replaced so all the power from the engine gets into the gearbox. Which is a pretty good up front definition of recovery for your car - albeit promising to be a bit expensive.
So you happily leave your car at your garage, and return a few days later to pick it up. The garage assures you your car is now recovered to its former glory and you pay your money and drive off. But very quickly you realise your car is far from fixed. It is different, but still very wrong. The tyres seem better, and the clutch does not seem to be slipping like it did, but the engine still seems pretty useless, and if you dip the clutch the car stops pretty rapidly, so the brakes are still binding somewhat. Overall your car goes a bit better than it did, but it is still way short of what a fixed car is supposed to be!
So you go back to the garage, and they tell you that your car
is fully recovered, because they redefined what is meant by recovery. They decided it would be OK for the engine to be a bit worse than before (handy, because it is), and the brakes are still about the same, but they accounted for that in their redefinition of recovery also. True, the fixed tyres and clutch help things a bit, but your poor car is still woefully unwell - no way fixed in any normal sense of the word. But the garage insists that their revised definition of recovery is valid, and just because the engine is worse that does not matter, because overall your car now meets their revised recovery criteria.
And in any case, when your car went into the garage, it did not meet
all their revised recovery criteria, just some of it - the tyres and clutch did need to be fixed even by their revised definition.
So they keep your money and insist there is nothing more they are obliged to do.
And this analogy is using pretty objective criteria, not subjective self-reporting!