MSEsperanza
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
Apologies for just popping in.
Don't know where else to put this so leaving some notes here regarding caveats when critiquing most common features of some researchers' claims about trial methodology and alleged benefits from therapist-delivered treatments for ME/CFS.
- Objective outcomes:
It's true that objectivity with regard to outcome measures is always a 'spectrum'.
And even an indisputably objective outcome like death needs to be interpreted: Is it caused / delayed due to the investigated treatment or due to an other cause?
So, there is a hierarchy of robustness with regards to objective outcome measures and those outcomes need to be analyzed properly, but on the other hand, there are subjective outcomes that clearly are subjective, and only subjective -- both subjectively reported and only subjectively assessable.
The point that certain objective outcomes are not entirely objective is not valid with regard to differentiating between subjective and objective outcomes in the context of reliable trial methodology.
- Improvement versus recovery
This point is somewhat related to objective outcomes like going back to work or school.
It there is no cure, of course every relevant improvement should also be counted as benefit, even if it doesn't lead to restored working ability.
I think that needs to be taken into account when evaluating treatment trials that claim to have found evidence for improvement of symptoms but not for restoring working ability.
If there were any reliably measurable, relevant improvements, that actually would be better than nothing. But behavorial treatment and physiotherapy ME/CFS trials I'm aware of didn't show evidence of improvement beyond a short-term placebo effect in a minority of patients.
I think though that selling placebo as evidenced-based treatment could be counter-productive to coping with a life-altering illness and could cause long term mental suffering and other harm.
Perhaps it would be worthwhile to discuss what people with ME see as relevant improvements if they can't go back to work or school?
This post has been copied to start a new discussion thread:Clinical trial outcome measures of improvement and recovery in ME/CFS - which ones are useful? Discussion thread
Don't know where else to put this so leaving some notes here regarding caveats when critiquing most common features of some researchers' claims about trial methodology and alleged benefits from therapist-delivered treatments for ME/CFS.
- Objective outcomes:
It's true that objectivity with regard to outcome measures is always a 'spectrum'.
And even an indisputably objective outcome like death needs to be interpreted: Is it caused / delayed due to the investigated treatment or due to an other cause?
So, there is a hierarchy of robustness with regards to objective outcome measures and those outcomes need to be analyzed properly, but on the other hand, there are subjective outcomes that clearly are subjective, and only subjective -- both subjectively reported and only subjectively assessable.
The point that certain objective outcomes are not entirely objective is not valid with regard to differentiating between subjective and objective outcomes in the context of reliable trial methodology.
- Improvement versus recovery
This point is somewhat related to objective outcomes like going back to work or school.
It there is no cure, of course every relevant improvement should also be counted as benefit, even if it doesn't lead to restored working ability.
I think that needs to be taken into account when evaluating treatment trials that claim to have found evidence for improvement of symptoms but not for restoring working ability.
If there were any reliably measurable, relevant improvements, that actually would be better than nothing. But behavorial treatment and physiotherapy ME/CFS trials I'm aware of didn't show evidence of improvement beyond a short-term placebo effect in a minority of patients.
I think though that selling placebo as evidenced-based treatment could be counter-productive to coping with a life-altering illness and could cause long term mental suffering and other harm.
Perhaps it would be worthwhile to discuss what people with ME see as relevant improvements if they can't go back to work or school?
This post has been copied to start a new discussion thread:Clinical trial outcome measures of improvement and recovery in ME/CFS - which ones are useful? Discussion thread
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