From Magical Medicine again:
Initially, the Trial Investigators planned to use objective measures of physical ability at the conclusion of the Trial (the cost of the Actiwatch sensors was included in the funding application), but Peter White decided that any actigraphy measurements should not be taken at the end of the Trial. As Tom Kindlon from Ireland points out, this is notable, since Professor White is aware that self‐reported (ie. subjective) improvements may not match real (ie. objective) improvements and equally that there are discrepancies between subjective and objective measures of activity (
http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471‐2377/7/6/comments#333618).
Not to use objective measures of improvement (such as actigraphy; physiological measurements; return to employment) is deemed by many to be scientifically inexcusable in an MRC trial that specifically sets out to assess the efficacy of the interventions employed in the trial.
Then:
Participants are told that they will be lent a heart rate monitor so that they can measure how hard they are working during their exercises and are instructed on how to use it (it is to be strapped under the shirt and it transmits a signal to a receiver on a strap like a watch strap).
This makes all the more incomprehensible Professor Peter White’s decision to abandon the use of actigraphy monitors that are strapped round an ankle and which provide an objective measure of improvement (or otherwise); compared with using a heart rate monitor and the need to keep daily activity diaries, RPE scores, goal sheets, exercise diaries, GET plans, progress sheets and other records, the wearing of an
actigraphy monitor for a week at the end of the PACE Trial would not be at all onerous.
:
(10) The Investigators originally intended to obtain a non‐invasive objective measure of outcome using post‐treatment actigraphy but abandoned this on the grounds that wearing such a monitor would be too great a burden at the end of the trial (
http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471‐2377/7/6/comments). Therefore, after
spending millions of pounds of public money and involving hundreds of people in an intensive regime, they completely fail to obtain objective measurements that would reveal whether or not the interventions are successful.
:
Furthermore, a study on (ME)CFS patients in the US by Friedberg et al that used CBT and which also encouraged activity found on actigraphy measurements that there was in fact a numerical decrease from the pre‐treatment baseline (Cognitive‐behaviour therapy in chronic fatigue syndrome: is improvement related to increased physical activity? J Clin Psychol 2009, Feburary 1).