And that is the idea that even CBT 'to cope with symptoms' has the issue that goes alongside it for ME/CFS that if symptoms are the signals by which a pwme knows they have overdone things then it is distorting the feedback system without a replacement for that information.
Which also makes me think of the Heins et al (2013) paper where did actually measure objective activity as well as perceived activity and they found that in those who thought they had done more than they had they thought their fatigue was lower. I'm not sure they used the term 'thought' though...
...But I did [use 'thought'] because (if you read the paper they divided people into fast, slow, non-responders to CBT) it sort of all comes down to a sewn-in ambiguity where the investigators seemed to believe this 'fatigue' as they measured it (CIS) was a different concept to what I suspect was for the participants an estimate along the lines of 'how exhausted do I feel'
divided by 'how much work have I just done'; and the treatment they'd just been put through was aimed at changing their perceptions.
Without it being a measure with frames of reference what were they really asking? And what question/concept were people answering? Because its like the difference between triangulating fatigue with even something that was somewhat anchored to a somewhat objective function such as 'were you too exhausted to shower this week' vs the types of scale that ask people whether they 'feel sleepy a lot'.
Someone thinking they've done an 8hr day at work when they have only done 6hrs or finished a marathon when they are only half way round doesn't indicate you've made them less tired. And the investigators were apparently surprised to confirm in their study that fatigue
increased with objective activity (that participants apparently weren't shown the readings for), because their beliefs were that these patients would feel better for exercising etc.
All of this of course really comes to a head as a conclusion in the longer term cumulative impact I suspect, because if I have to keep pushing my limits then the more permanent deterioration hits at say 6-12months as a reduction in threshold. And that is often well after these studies take their last measures, as well as often requires someone to be well enough to do said follow-up and not have dropped out (the filter of a treatment that the illest can't complete).
And that it is even more problematic as a technique depending on what is being used to encourage people to 'not notice/pay attention' so instils self-blame (or humiliation where the inference is other people either wouldn't do it or might judge) and/or creates a no-win for the patient - the prime example of which is the personality stuff (lazy/perfectionist), boom/bust inferences and sleep hygiene stuff saying people can't sleep because they rest too much based on no evidence.
I guess this all circles back to the issue of poor diagnosing, but also even after diagnosing the main illness a problem with not identifying the underlying cause/issue that in that instance
actually is what someone could do with help with - rather than old models that are based on assumptions that have behind them grim stigma-labels, unevidenced ideas about personality, assumptions about exercise etc, or lack of insight become assumptions that too often mean the patient's voice is dismissed.
There is surely a tough task if patients reaching this allied profession do so with diagnoses and assumed causes that they aren't allowed to question. But still a worthwhile one!
But I do like the idea one day of having hallmarks that 'maybe it is ME/CFS vs ...' and there is probably a list of a few things not just FND here?
Please don't take this as any type of answer, and take the advice of those suggesting as
@Hutan has above, which is a more sensible approach for the context I think - this is just a note that you've highlighted a whole new piece of work/thinking to go through that I'm trying to get my head around and is still at 'making a hash of it' stage
