And then the last trial was very recently, which is, I have irritable bowel syndrome, not - it comes and goes, I mean, I can be perfectly normal for months, and then I can get attacks. And so there was a local researcher in the university I was working who was doing a trial of pro-biotic yoghurt versus plain yoghurt, not pro-biotic yoghurt, to see whether it controlled the symptoms of irritable bowel, and I was eligible and I signed up for it and it required you to drink, to eat two cartons of yoghurt a day for six months, I think it was, or - I can’t even remember. It was a long time, I remember feeling quite yoghurted-out by the end of it. And you’d just pick up your yoghurts in boxes with a number, you know, LR0911 on the top or whatever it was, and had to fill in a diary about how you felt. And I was interested in doing this trial because I’m interested, I’m actually interested - I’ve just switched jobs - I’m interested in the public running trials on themselves, you know. So people who like myself were interested in generating knowledge, we’d get together and we’d do it. And I just wanted to see how easy it was, and actually it’s, it’s quite difficult. You forget to fill in the diary and you think, “Oh, what was it last Wednesday?” or you scribble it on a piece of paper because you don’t have your book with you because you’ve gone away and, you know, you really don’t feel like a yoghurt but you have to eat it, and I was very compliant, I’m sure I was much more compliant than most people, just because there’s part of me that’s a bit of a researcher and so it makes you realise just how much noise or rubbish must be put into trials really because you’re thinking, you know, “What was it?” And then I’d think, “Oh, well, I remember” and then I’d find my bit of paper and it wasn’t true. Then I’d have to go back and change it, you know. So, but if I hadn’t found the piece of paper that misinformation would then have been put in. You had to, how many stools did you pass and what, how firm were they. There was a little chart where you had to categorise your, [laughs] your stool and this sort of thing. And actually during the whole period I was asymptomatic, and I was actually quite interested in how the research nurse dealt with me, because she, I think she was frustrated because there were no symptoms.
And also I was neither better nor worse and so the other half of her was wanting me to say I was better, when I didn’t necessarily feel I was better, I just felt I was unchanged. And I felt people were wanting a certain result, I really did get that impression, so I thought it’s, you know, it’s really important that staff are blinded as well. They can’t, you can’t help but want a result, that what nobody wanted to hear was, “Well, I’m just the same. You know, I haven’t noticed any change at all”, you know, so which is, was my situation. Later they told me that I had been on, on the pro-biotic yoghurt, which was a good thing because I was asymptomatic and I remained asymptomatic. So, who knows? Well, I say it was a good thing, but who knows whether that was, I haven’t seen the results of the trial yet, so….
Very difficult isn’t it? Particularly with those self-report kind of conditions--
Yeah,
--where there’s no sort of objective kind of, you know, like a tumour size shrinking is in a way easy to measure, isn’t it, but something like that?
I really think these things have to be blinded from staff as well, because you can’t help, I mean, if you’re running a trial, I want to run a trial, you can’t help wanting the result, because you, you wouldn’t be doing the trial unless you believed your intervention was effective, really, I think. Although they say you’re supposed to be in equipoise*. I don’t think you would ever begin a trial unless you actually believed there was good grounds to think that this will work.
* FOOTNOTE: ‘Equipoise’ means a situation where clinicians are uncertain which treatment is best – literally it means they are balanced equally between them.