Cognitive behaviour therapy and objective assessments in chronic fatigue syndrome.
McPhee, Graham · Journal of health psychology · 2017 · DOI
Quick Summary
This review looked at studies testing whether cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT)—a talking treatment—helps people with ME/CFS. Most studies only asked patients if they felt better, but didn't measure whether they could actually do more physical activities. The review found little evidence that CBT improves what patients can actually do or helps them return to work.
Why It Matters
This study is important because it identifies a critical gap in how ME/CFS treatments are evaluated. If we only ask patients how they feel without measuring actual physical changes, we may overestimate treatment benefits. More rigorous, objective measurement methods are essential for understanding whether treatments like CBT truly help people with ME/CFS improve their functioning.
Observed Findings
Few CBT studies in ME/CFS use objective outcome measures as primary endpoints
Existing studies relying on subjective self-report show apparent improvements that are not corroborated by objective assessments
Lack of evidence linking CBT to measurable improvements in physical capabilities
Minimal data on CBT's impact on return-to-work outcomes
Absence of baseline activity monitoring datasets needed for future research
Inferred Conclusions
Current evidence does not support that CBT produces detectable improvements in objective physical functioning in ME/CFS
Future ME/CFS treatment studies should include objective assessments as primary outcomes, not secondary measures
Activity monitoring and similar objective tools require proper baseline datasets before they can be reliably used in clinical trials
Remaining Questions
Why do subjective improvements reported by CBT-treated patients not translate to objective functional gains?
Which objective measures are most appropriate and sensitive for detecting real changes in ME/CFS?
Do different CBT approaches produce different patterns of subjective versus objective outcomes?
What This Study Does Not Prove
This review does not prove that CBT is ineffective—it demonstrates that most CBT trials lack objective measures to properly evaluate it. It also does not explain why subjective and objective measures might differ, nor does it address whether different CBT approaches might show different results with proper measurement.