I am planning to write to COPE (of which Cochrane is a member) to complain (
https://publicationethics.org/complaints-and-concerns-about-our-members) The new Cochrane withdrawal policy was changed suddenly in August 2019 with no transparent decision-making process behind the change (
https://documentation.cochrane.org/display/EPPR/2019/10). I think it was decided in a hurry because of the pressure by me and others to withdraw the CBT and Exercise reviews. Of course I will never be able to prove that.
Now one of the very limited reasons given for withdrawing a review is a "serious error" which means following the conclusions might cause harm to patients. (
https://documentation.cochrane.org/display/EPPR/Withdrawing+published+Cochrane+Reviews)
On the one hand this makes it look like Cochrane care about patients. On the other, they rejected my request to withdraw the reviews because they decided there was no specific (ie. statistical, or other technical) error. So the fact that harm may be caused to patients by their publications because they are out of date and/or poorly conducted, or contradict more recent thorough evidence reviews, as done by NICE in this case, is not their concern.
This doesn't seem to be ethical publication practice to me, especially for an charitable organisation whose motto is "Trusted evidence....informed decisions...better health". I am fairly sure COPE will disagree and think it's all absolutely fine, but you never know. Even if they do agree, they can only make recommendations to their members, which their members can ignore. Hey ho. Keeps me off the streets.