That was one of my initial thoughts about it, and I even thought "oh, that's a good idea - they're going to teach people to carefully pace themselves in order to minimise the potential damage from acute onset ME." (I'd just woken up, and wasn't thinking clearly!)
Then I realised that it's most likely the opposite of that - they will probably teach patients to ignore and disregard their symptoms so a pattern of (theoretically alleged but discredited) symptom-focusing doesn't establish itself; and they will probably train patients to push-through their symptoms to avoid (theoretically alleged but discredited) deconditioning setting in.
So it could be a way of seriously damaging ME patients for the long-term, before the patient has a chance to understand their illness and implement an adaptive and protective response to the illness. If that is the case then it would be utterly devoid of morality, and it would be potentially deeply harmful, based upon the way we know that patients need to protect themselves from PEM especially in the early days of illness. For the patients who have ME or SEID rather than simply a spell of fatigue, such an approach will be dangerous and damaging.
Sorry, I didn't mean to have a rant, but this is a really annoying development, and it's more wasted money. It staggers me how these people seem to have an endless pot of money at their disposal every time they come up with another stupid idea based on discredited theories, hypotheses and research. Sigh.