Other than sufficient knowledge of the topic and methodological rigor, no particular set of values and beliefs are necessary to provide valuable peer review, but those held are biases that influence peer review. Dr Newton seems to adhere to the biopsychosocial model of ME/CFS and this is highly likely to influence her peer review.
In your previous post, you said that your choice of Dr Newton was made based on the positive feedback you have received, but you now say that this is irrelevant to peer review. Thus the choice should have fallen back onto assessing her "technical knowledge and analytical and written skills" alone, which should have included taking into account her published work on physical activity/exercise in ME/CFS. Had it been, given its poor methodological quality, it seems unlikely that Dr Newton would have been chosen.
Did this body of work not come to your attention or was it overlooked otherwise?
Cochrane may well publish post-publication peer reviews, but the upholding of the review after patients highlighted serious flaws, which has instead led to this drawn-out update process, the dead-end responses from Cochrane to
@Caroline Struthers' repeated queries, the change of the retraction policy are all examples that it fails and is unwilling to act upon it.
To date, in the context of ME/CFS, the only purpose of comments on the "behavior of a minority" has been to
stifle scientific criticism of research on exercise therapy and CBT -- and their harms -- by their proponents (not just in the UK, but also notably in
Norway). While
judicial scrutiny found them to be baseless, they have been
amplified by public relations campaigns, and
have been used to criticize the update of the Cochrane review.
Therefore, now that you have put it forward, clarification on your definition of this "behavior" and who is the "minority" is not just helpful, it is essential in keeping this update process fact-based. Unclear and unsubstantiated claims about patients have no place in a process that claims to be consumer-centric.
I believe that your involvement in the process is the closest commitment from Cochrane to openness/outreach that we will get. I am thankful for the work you have put in, but I am disappointed that once again, Cochrane, through your voice, chooses to ignore or reply in a very generic manner to specific (and reasonable) questions asked by patients whose lives have been, are and will continue to be impacted by the review. The process remains opaque and is being conducted behind-the-scenes. I hope you'll be able to answer these questions in time -- the importance of transparency cannot be overstated --.