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I don't know how many folks are watching Wikipedia:WikiProject Medicine/Article alerts these days, so I thought I'd say that the following GA nominations might be interesting to some editors here:
A whole article on one resolution from 2003? I doubt it's sufficiently notable for a standalone article. As for our our cannabis content - in general it's in pretty bad shape still: this list[1] from SandyGeorgia is still pertinent. Alexbrn (talk) 15:16, 6 April 2018 (UTC)
It passes GNG, so it can be kept -- though if no one lengthens the article it could still be merged if that is most convenient, without prejudice to future recreation and expansion. A comparable article is Matrimonial nullity trial reforms of Pope Francis. We must be careful not to let majoritarianism, under guise of "notability", turn into anti-Semitism. Wnt (talk) 23:50, 6 April 2018 (UTC)
I'm not convinced that it passes GNG. I see no "significant coverage". The cited sources are mostly about something else and give only two or three sentences about the resolution. They all basically repeat the same simple facts (which probably explains why the article is only five sentences long: we can't verify anything else about it). There's no indication of any significance other than a disputed claim to being "first". There's no analysis of why the resolution matters (assuming it does, which I begin to doubt), no explanation of any effects produced by the resolution, or anything else. It's just "Hey, this woman wanted them to pass a resolution on this topic, and they did, and they might have been the first religious 'body' (but definitely not the first religious 'organization') to do that."
AFAICT, URJ has an annual meeting whose main purpose seems to be passing resolutions. In 2003, they passed a dozen such resolutions. Neither the current stub nor any of the cited sources give any explanation why anyone should care about this resolution, much less why this one is worth attention and not the one congratulating the American Conference Of Cantors on their 50th anniversary, or their resolution in favor of stem cell research. We don't need an entire article to say "They might have been the first (or second, or fourth) religious body to pass a resolution on this subject." WhatamIdoing (talk) 06:28, 8 April 2018 (UTC)
I was not suggesting anyone here wanted to be anti-Semitic, but if we start deciding whether religious concepts and events are notable based on the proportional amount of publicity, we inevitably will end up with that result, regardless of initial intention, because there are fewer Jews and presumably fewer Jewish religious periodicals. We should look only whether we have multiple sources to make an article, which is a fixed threshold, and should be a low one -- I would abolish that threshold were it possible to make an article without any way to learn about the topic. I should also note that what any religion thinks about the use of medical marijuana, or any other therapy, is strictly a religious question, not a medical issue at all. There are not, nor ever have been, any medical claims in that article. Wnt (talk) 13:50, 8 April 2018 (UTC)
The GNG requires more than multiple sources. It requires:
multiple – got that
independent – got that
secondary – Not sure Maybe we have that, and maybe we don't.
reliable sources – got that
with significant coverage – missing that
The problem isn't getting two-sentence mentions in mainstream media. The problem is that nobody – not the pro-cannabis people, not the Jewish people, not the anti-marijuana people – during the last decade and a half seems to have thought that this vote was worth writing 500 words about it. We've got "multiple" sources. What we don't have is any hope of getting past the WP:PERMASTUB range or meeting the goals of WP:WHYN. WhatamIdoing (talk) 19:57, 8 April 2018 (UTC)
I have just cleaned up the browser bookmarks folder where I had saved bad links to medicine-related topics. Four problems remain (search for "disam" on these pages):
A paragraph about self-help to combat the psychological effects of "gaslighting" has been added to the above article. I'm not sure that it's appropriate. Can someone take a look?—Anne Delong (talk) 09:37, 9 April 2018 (UTC)
The citations in the paragraph added fail WP:MEDRS. The medical literature does discuss gaslighting. However, I am struggling to find anything that meets MEDRS that is suitable as a replacement here. It would seem worth citing Gass & Nichols (Contemp Fam Ther (1988) 10: 3. doi:10.1007/BF00922429) as a key early paper, but it doesn't help much in terms of treatment. There's a recent, non-systematic, kind-of review by Davendralingam (2018, doi:10.1177/0141076818763326) that may be of some use. Bondegezou (talk) 10:01, 9 April 2018 (UTC)
I've removed the passages, not because they fail WP:MEDRS, but because they were either very poorly sourced according to WP:RS or just simply unsourced. Medium is not an acceptable source, neither is lonerwolf.com — and that is for any statement. Dbaechle, Anne Delong — I have no problem with the message conveyed, but you need to use better sources. Aslo, be careful when saying things about psychological health, you then need to adhere to MEDRS. Carl Fredrik talk05:59, 10 April 2018 (UTC)
Medium.com actually would be an acceptable source if the author meets WP:SPS standards. It is certainly no worse than Facebook posts or Twitter links. WhatamIdoing (talk) 15:34, 10 April 2018 (UTC)
True, but in the presence of other better sources I think we should prefer them. I do not feel Medium is acceptable in this case, especially as it straddles invoking MEDRS — where SPS is even less acceptable, nigh on forbidden. Carl Fredrik talk20:39, 10 April 2018 (UTC)
In case anybody is curious the ten most-ever-cited clinical trial papers discussed in that paper (in chronological order) are the following:
Extended content
Diabetes Control and Complications Trial Research, Group.; et al. (30 September 1993). "The effect of intensive treatment of diabetes on the development and progression of long-term complications in insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus". The New England journal of medicine. 329 (14): 977–86. doi:10.1056/NEJM199309303291401. PMID8366922.
"Randomised trial of cholesterol lowering in 4444 patients with coronary heart disease: the Scandinavian Simvastatin Survival Study (4S)". Lancet. 344 (8934): 1383–9. 19 November 1994. PMID7968073. {{cite journal}}: Invalid |display-authors=1 (help)
Shepherd, J; et al. (16 November 1995). "Prevention of coronary heart disease with pravastatin in men with hypercholesterolemia. West of Scotland Coronary Prevention Study Group". The New England journal of medicine. 333 (20): 1301–7. doi:10.1056/NEJM199511163332001. PMID7566020.
National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke rt-PA Stroke Study, Group. (14 December 1995). "Tissue plasminogen activator for acute ischemic stroke". The New England journal of medicine. 333 (24): 1581–7. doi:10.1056/NEJM199512143332401. PMID7477192. {{cite journal}}: Invalid |display-authors=1 (help)
"Intensive blood-glucose control with sulphonylureas or insulin compared with conventional treatment and risk of complications in patients with type 2 diabetes (UKPDS 33). UK Prospective Diabetes Study (UKPDS) Group". Lancet. 352 (9131): 837–53. 12 September 1998. PMID9742976. {{cite journal}}: Invalid |display-authors=1 (help)
Slamon, DJ; et al. (15 March 2001). "Use of chemotherapy plus a monoclonal antibody against HER2 for metastatic breast cancer that overexpresses HER2". The New England journal of medicine. 344 (11): 783–92. doi:10.1056/NEJM200103153441101. PMID11248153.
van den Berghe, G; et al. (8 November 2001). "Intensive insulin therapy in critically ill patients". The New England journal of medicine. 345 (19): 1359–67. doi:10.1056/NEJMoa011300. PMID11794168.
Hurwitz, H; et al. (3 June 2004). "Bevacizumab plus irinotecan, fluorouracil, and leucovorin for metastatic colorectal cancer". The New England journal of medicine. 350 (23): 2335–42. doi:10.1056/NEJMoa032691. PMID15175435.
Well, those diffs might contain about three times as many paragraphs as is warranted, but it's probably reasonable to consider it reliable for some of the claims made, e.g., "This one paper suggested this as a problem, and that as a potential mitigation effort". WhatamIdoing (talk) 04:35, 12 April 2018 (UTC)
It looks like a fascinating paper, and I'll have to read it properly, but it does say "This study assesses the 10 most cited RCTs worldwide and shows that trials inevitably produce bias." which seems a stretch. You'd have to look at significantly more RCTs to come to this conclusion, even though it is quite notable. Carl Fredrik talk08:54, 12 April 2018 (UTC)
I think that the examples given in the article suggest that it's formally impossible to remove all bias, in which case the findings aren't particularly interesting. — soupvector (talk) 23:44, 12 April 2018 (UTC)
Thank you Ozzie. We do need more voices there. This article is a consistent pain in the butt. Men and their penises, argh. Jytdog (talk) 03:51, 17 April 2018 (UTC)
Dowd, MD; Sege, RD; Council on Injury, Violence, and Poison Prevention Executive, Committee.; American Academy of, Pediatrics. (November 2012). "Firearm-related injuries affecting the pediatric population". Pediatrics. 130 (5): e1416-23. doi:10.1542/peds.2012-2481. PMID23080412. Gun avoidance programs are designed to educate children as a way of reducing firearm injury (eg, Eddie Eagle, STAR); however, several evaluation studies have demonstrated that such programs do not prevent risk behaviors.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
Whether the article about the (US) National Rifle Association should state that they sponsor safety programs or certify firearm instructors does not seem even remotely like biomedical information. Whether the safety programs produce safer behavior (their most famous likely doesn't) is not being discussed here. The statement being made is purely about organizational activities, not about whether those activities meet their stated goals. WhatamIdoing (talk) 21:36, 4 April 2018 (UTC)
That turns out to be not the case. When the NRA baldly claim that they run safety programmes without further qualification, it gives the reader the impression that those safety programmes actually have a significant effect on safety - for which there is no evidence. It's called 'spin'. The misapplication of the label "safety" is the problem there, not the factual accuracy of these programmes' existence. --RexxS (talk) 16:23, 5 April 2018 (UTC)
Preventing (accidental and intentional) firearm injuries is a public health issue, but that's not really the point of the NRA article. The point of that article is pretty much "There's this org, which does lobbying and gives classes". The proposed sentence "The organization issues credentials and trains firearm instructors", OTOH, is unrelated to health.
RexxS, I think it's fair to mention the existence of their programs (especially remembering that the proposed list includes programs with no clear connection to safety). The fact is that these programs exist, and it's one of the two main things that the org does. There'd be nothing wrong with saying "They offer a bunch of classes, including a safety class that has been criticized as ineffective", but there is something wrong with omitting the fact that they offer classes altogether. Eddie Eagle (their independently notable, largely ineffective safety program) needs to be mentioned somewhere in that article, and right now, there's no connection from the NRA to it. WhatamIdoing (talk) 19:11, 5 April 2018 (UTC)
@WhatamIdoing: I like your wording! There certainly wouldn't be anything wrong with saying "They offer a bunch of classes, including a safety class that has been criticized as ineffective". Sadly, that alternative is not on the table as far as I can see. --RexxS (talk) 22:06, 5 April 2018 (UTC)
My impression of that discussion is that far too many editors have interpreted it as a Request For All-or-Nothing Votes, and what they needed was a Request for Help Finding a Compromise. (Feel free to dress up that idea in an encyclopedic tone and propose it as an alternative if you want to.) WhatamIdoing (talk) 02:03, 6 April 2018 (UTC)
Eddie Eagle is a safety program. The fact that it is a safety program does not mean that it is an effective program, but the fact that it is ineffective at improving safety does not magically transform it into some other kind of program. It shouldn't be surprising that it's a failure; most Behavior-based safety programs are failures, and almost all one-off information sessions with children are doomed. (Need proof? Find the nearest parent and ask them how many years they spent saying things like "Don't run around in busy parking lots".) WhatamIdoing (talk) 04:30, 12 April 2018 (UTC)
We agree with the American Academy of Pediatrics and the review article that the Eddie Eagle program is ineffective. My understanding of WP:MEDRS is that we may no more say in Wikipedia voice that Eddie Eagle is a "firearms safety program for children," then we could for example describe apricot seeds as a cancer cure. What is your understanding? Better would be "This article is about the NRA's firearm program for children." 50.233.97.130 (talk) 22:29, 12 April 2018 (UTC)
Your metaphor fails: the primary purpose of apricot seeds is making more apricot trees, not treating disease.
A more apt comparison would be to something like the US FAA's old Air Transportation Oversight System safety program. ATOS didn't work. It was still a safety program. It did not stop being a safety program even though everyone concluded (eventually) that it was ineffective. WhatamIdoing (talk) 16:19, 13 April 2018 (UTC)
Like most of us WAID is subject to a cognitive bias in favour of the mature complex organism. Dawkins argued convincingly that the tree is just an elaborate means for the reproduction of the seed, or at a more basic level, the reproduction of its constituent genes. However, the idea that the NRA is anything other than an elaborate sales organization rings false to most of the world. Even if Eddie had been effective as a user training program, its objective was still to sell more firearms to hit more targets. For those whose only interaction with firearms is in the role of potential targets, that does not seem like any kind of safety program.LeadSongDogcome howl!17:23, 18 April 2018 (UTC)
As a new page patroller, I don't think I've ever seen a new redirect page created with a WikiProject tagged on it. The only redirect tags I see are on pages that were once filled with content but moved to another page at some later time (rather than submit an AfD, for instance). Then the old page gets the tag for historical purposes (and it shows we've been there before). Tagging every single redirect just for the heck of it will add tens of thousands of pages to this project's article count, and I don't really see the positive of doing so. SEMMENDINGER (talk) 13:42, 13 April 2018 (UTC)
I agree. Wikiproject tags seem to be only added to redirects that used to be pages. I don't see the value in adding them to thousands of redirects. Natureium (talk) 14:25, 13 April 2018 (UTC)
I am not familiar with this practice. The Wikipedia category system is for human browsing, and I cannot think of a reason why a human would want to have easy access to a list of redirects. If such a list existed, then it should be in its own category of redirects and not mixed with Wikipedia articles, because it would add a lot of text which most readers should not see. I do not know what guidelines exist for discussing categories for redirects. What is your motivation for doing this? Blue Rasberry (talk)15:16, 13 April 2018 (UTC)
جار الله, please stop. This WikiProject doesn't normally tag redirects (with the occasional exception for redirects that might be targets for edit warring or deletion). WhatamIdoing (talk) 16:22, 13 April 2018 (UTC)
Per here[5] we have more than 4000 redirects that are tagged by WPMED. Not sure what is wrong with tagging them? Not completely sure what the use of tagging them is either. Doc James (talk · contribs · email) 10:14, 18 April 2018 (UTC)
Don't see anything wrong with tagging. For the Academic Journals project, we tag redirects. The advantage is that if one if, say, taken to RfD, then the Article Alert Bot will alert the project. Makes tracking things easier. We still have many untagged redirects, perhaps Jarbot 3 could next tackle WP:WikiProject Academic Journals? --Randykitty (talk) 10:26, 18 April 2018 (UTC)
We usually have tags on pages if it was tagged before the article was moved. The other reason is if there's been a controversy about a particular one. It's pointless to tag most most redirects (how many different hyphens and dashes are there?), and tagging everything makes it harder to find the few redirects that we care about (or even to use the stats table at WP:MEDA to see how many real articles we're watching, because redirects get tallied there exactly like a real article). WhatamIdoing (talk) 15:27, 18 April 2018 (UTC)
LOL. I'm reminded of the hilarity with "glucojasinogen". ;) I can't believe nobody has made a bot to search all of PubMed abstracts, or at least new ones, vs. all of Wikipedia. Wnt (talk) 12:17, 5 April 2018 (UTC)
Well, someone did something better than that: They wrote a bunch of missing encyclopedia articles, posted half on Wikipedia (and kept the others offline, as a control group), waited a while, and then checked a huge database to see how many had been plagiarized.
I believe that the conclusion on their side was that plagiarism of Wikipedia articles was a serious problem in low-ranking journals (perhaps the lowest quartile as measured by WP:Impact factor; I believe that journals with a significant number of non-Western/non-native English-speaking authors was a particular risk), and the conclusion on our side was that newbies creating short articles on complex scientific subjects is an unreasonable burden on existing editors. WhatamIdoing (talk) 02:15, 6 April 2018 (UTC)
Done. PS: WhatamIdoing thank you for clarifying that my early work as a med student qualifies as "newbies creating short articles on complex scientific subjects is an unreasonable burden on existing editors." :-) LOL !!
On a side note I had to search >30min before finding some guidance on Wikipedia on how to deal with these kind of matters. James, what if we took an initiative to ask for corrections and/or retractions of all scholarly papers which contain medical backward copyvio? That would certainly discourage future "fake" OA journals to continue this practice... Do we know anyone who can make a bot for that? --Steven Fruitsmaak (Reply) 21:24, 9 April 2018 (UTC)
The community has changed since 2005. Back when you were a newbie, everyone thought it was awesome that anyone who actually knew anything would help out. Now, I guess we think we're too good for grad students to try their best at expanding. :-/ WhatamIdoing (talk) 23:51, 9 April 2018 (UTC)
A problem though: the medical FAs are not being maintained and many of them would not survive WP:FAR. A particularly bad example right now is Alzheimer's disease, which I promoted TEN years ago. Both of the original FA writers are gone, and the article is in very bad shape. Just comparing the Table of Contents from the 2008 promoted version to the current Table of Contents gives you an idea of how much unreviewed text the article has taken on, and the field has certainly changed in 10 years.
Same can be said for any of the medical FAs where the original authors have moved on.
Thank you Sandy. I just noticed the WMF (I presume) is paying Google to promote Wikipedia as "the fact-checked online encyclopedia" [7]. I'm looking for a group of articles to submit to independent experts for fact-checking, just to test how well fact-checked Wikipedia is, and thought all of our featured disease articles (as they stand today) might be an appropriate sample. Maybe those plus the same number of randomly-selected disease GAs, Bs and Cs. Not sure. Still thinking about the best approach. --Anthonyhcole (talk · contribs · email) 14:38, 15 April 2018 (UTC)
Do they specify what they mean by "fact-checked"? There is a whole spectrum of fact-checking quality, and just using the term without qualification does not convey much information and could reasonably be described as "hype" and "click-bait". Some of the facts are checked some of the time would be more accurate. Even in FA reviews I doubt anyone checks every statement, except sometimes maybe the nominator. · · · Peter (Southwood)(talk): 16:20, 15 April 2018 (UTC)
It's just a typical Google ad at the top of the search results page, Peter. There's a screenshot here. Hard to read on mobile. It says: "Explore the fact-checked online encyclopedia. Over 40 million articles. 295 languages. Edited by volunteers." --Anthonyhcole (talk · contribs · email) 05:51, 16 April 2018 (UTC)
So basically clickbait. As such it is quite possible that Google did it for no reason other than encouraging people to use their search engine, · · · Peter (Southwood)(talk): 07:36, 16 April 2018 (UTC)
Almost every one of our medical GAs is in serious trouble (GA has little meaning, one person review), but I think your best shot at fact checking to show the problem just now is the Alzheimer's article. I do wish there were some focus on keeping at least the FAs accurate, or submitting them to FAR, but not the case ... I found a number of deficiencies at attention deficit hyperactivity disorder last month, and that was based on only a quick scan of what I knew (tics). SandyGeorgia (Talk) 14:49, 15 April 2018 (UTC)
Answered that question myself: ADHD says it is a Good article, but it is not listed at the Good article page, so ... GA has no oversight, and is only one person's review. SandyGeorgia (Talk) 15:00, 15 April 2018 (UTC)
Yes ... since I helped develop the original {{Article history}} template and implement its rollout on every FA at the time we developed it (Wikipedia:Wikipedia Signpost/2008-03-24/Dispatches), I do know how to check for that data :) Point being, the GA list is not accurate, because ADHD is not listed at WP:GA. I don't participate in GA, so do not know if the bot was supposed to add it, if the reviewer was supposed to add it, if it was added and later deleted, etc ... don't much care, other than pointing out that Anthony can't rely on the GA list as he can the FA list. (For that matter, the last time I audited the FA list was several years ago, and I am not sure if the current delegates audit it as I did.) SandyGeorgia (Talk) 17:16, 15 April 2018 (UTC)
I thought that would be the case, but as it took me a bit of effort to find them I posted here for those like me who don't know the system inside out. · · · Peter (Southwood)(talk): 07:36, 16 April 2018 (UTC)
Pbsouthwood, you should always be able to find the link to the event (FAC, FAR, GA, DYK, etc) in the Article milestones, and you can find the article version that goes with that event by clicking on the date next to the event. Assuming the various bots are keeping up with their chores :) Regards, SandyGeorgia (Talk) 13:00, 16 April 2018 (UTC)
I doubt the WMF is actually paying Google for that - in fact I think they sensibly avoid any "fact-checked" claim, which they certainly should. Does anyone know differently? Johnbod (talk) 15:03, 15 April 2018 (UTC)
Itsays it's an ad, John, and that usually means someone has paid for it. But you may be right that WMF didn't pay for it. Maybe a benevolent third party did. Maybe Google gave it to them. (WMF's ED Katherine Maher and Chief Revenue Officer Lisa Gruwell are both telling the big companies that use us to "give back in some way."[8]) Whatever. It's a claim that's likely to mislead and imo shouldn't be made. --Anthonyhcole (talk · contribs · email) 05:51, 16 April 2018 (UTC)
I missed the small print. There is a little icon specifying [Ad] and wikipedia.org, not WMF, Wikipedia. Interesting. Who would be able to or be authorised to advertise in Wikipedia's name? · · · Peter (Southwood)(talk): 07:43, 16 April 2018 (UTC)
I'm not getting it. Two things. First, when I google Wikipedia, I don't get that (has it been removed already)? Second, which icon or small print tells me it's an ad? I don't see that in the image ? SandyGeorgia (Talk) 13:00, 16 April 2018 (UTC)
I try to avoid FARing (or involving myself in FARs) of articles I promoted. And a much better outcome would be for folks here to bring those articles back to standard :( I don't know if this page is accurate, but it appears that they get HUGE amounts of hits, and it would seem that the Medicine Project would want to prioritize maintenance on high-profile medical FAs. SandyGeorgia (Talk) 14:00, 16 April 2018 (UTC)
I don't think so. My current thinking is that readers probably don't want (just) "more video"; they want "more multimedia and interactive features", of which video is simply one small example and possibly not the most important. WhatamIdoing (talk) 17:02, 19 April 2018 (UTC)
Given that the question was "How can we make Wikipedia more interactive for readers?" it's not surprising that there was relatively little mention of video. Video can be a wonderful medium for enriching articles, but it's not interactive. Clayoquot (talk | contribs) 05:15, 20 April 2018 (UTC)
Are these sources reliable to include information on Ayurveda#History, that "The origins of Ayurveda have been traced to around 6,000 BCE"? I am copying the most convincing texts from the discussion held on Talk:Ayurveda.
"Ayurveda.... can be traced back about 8000 years",[9]byJohn Walton, Jeremiah A. Barondess, Stephen Lock, published by Oxford University Press. The authors if the chapter are Jagjit Singh Chopra and Sudesh Prabhakar, two prominent neurologists.
Alternative Therapies For Epilepsy, "Ayurveda originated as traditional medical system in India nearly 8,000 years ago", it says. Written by Steven V. Pacia, Orrin Devinsky (Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry professor) and Steven Schachter (neurology professor) and published by Demos Medical Publishing. In the next page (28) it gives the details on Ayurveda as medical practice and also the scientific overview. On page 29, there is a conclusion about all these medicines provided, which seems to be mainstream.
JzG agreed with first source to be fine, but made no comments on other two.
What do people think? I was going to post this on WP:RSN but that board is stale, and not really everyone there is familiar with medical subjects. My Lord (talk) 04:45, 15 April 2018 (UTC)
I think the first and third are solid, mostly because they are more focused on that topic in the first place. The second source is not ostensibly about Ayurdeva and therefore the author of that probably isn't an expert in the dating and probably got it elsewhere (perhaps one of the other references here!) I see nothing wrong with including them, be sure to double check with other editors on its talk page though. SEMMENDINGER (talk) 19:21, 17 April 2018 (UTC)
This is a side note about arbitration remedies: Getting a notice about discretionary sanctions is scary for most editors, especially if you don't happen to be particularly familiar with Wikipedia's backend work. So for those who follow this page but not the drama pages, let me say that "discretionary sanctions" means that people who are NOT YOU have previously screwed up in a big way on those articles, and admins may be in a "shoot first, and ask questions later" mode. It's meant to be fair warning about problems created by other people, and getting a "warning" about other people's problems really, truly doesn't say anything about you.
And, in the spirit of scaring off as few folks as possible, if you see a new editor fix a typo or slightly change a sentence in a sanctioned article, please don't warn them off. Tracking warnings issued over uncontroversial changes creates pointless and wasteful bureaucracy as well as discouraging editors. WhatamIdoing (talk) 15:31, 20 April 2018 (UTC)
After new data harvests from various sources, about 11,500 PubMedCentral identifiers have been found which need to be added to existing citations in English Wikipedia articles. Each PMC identifier helps verifiability and the consultation of reliable sources: the open access version of an article, registered in PubMed, gets linked from the title of the citation and from the ID link next to a green open access open lock ().
Hello, the above article has recently come out of the Articles for Creation process; it could use some expert attention as it might be an advert for a particular device. Espresso Addict (talk) 11:10, 13 April 2018 (UTC)
Like the autism spectrum, with Lewy bodies and synucleinopathies, we have overlapping conditions in the Lewy body dementias (LBD), dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB), and Parkinson's disease dementia (PDD), along with Parkinson's disease (PD). The terminology is so dreadful, that when I started working up dementia with Lewy bodies, I was amazed to find that we did not even have articles on LBD or PDD, our PD article (another FA) doesn't even mention PDD, and that the DLB article was quite confused, mixing text about LBD into DLB. So ...
And it promptly was tagged with a merge proposal, to take it back to one of the main articles (when it applies to four articles, spectrum style). Could people please have a look at Talk:Lewy body dementia for discussion of the merge proposal? I laid out the reason for the sub-article there, but the editor who suggested the merge isn't convinced. SandyGeorgia (Talk) 02:21, 23 April 2018 (UTC)
@Guy Macon: The user who ran the script to scrape the data is too busy to carry on doing the work. We can't get hold of the script, so I'm in the process of trying to re-write the whole thing from scratch. That will take some considerable time unless somebody comes up with a better idea. --RexxS (talk) 00:07, 6 March 2018 (UTC)
Hmm. Sorry about my late response - I've been super busy lately. It's unfortunate that we don't have the old scripts for this to modify and use for 2017. I would've taken this on if we had those. Seppi333 (Insert 2¢) 00:26, 20 March 2018 (UTC)
Perhaps we can make a place where old scripts can be archived and maybe even make archiving a requirement for using a script? It seems strange that we keep every old article version yet keep losing important scripts and other tools. --Guy Macon (talk) 17:22, 28 March 2018 (UTC)
I know this is late notice of the event, but I am sharing information rather than seeking any particular response or engagement.
LaGuardia Community College is hosting an April 2018 Wikipedia Translatathon tomorrow and Friday, 26-27 April 2018. The context is that LaGuardia is the most linguistically diverse school in NYC and the world because it actively seeks to enroll students of diverse backgrounds from NYC's already diverse population. This school and its various faculty and staff have engaged in Wikipedia programs since perhaps 2010. Wikipedia:LaGuardia Community College has some information about their projects, which include participation in the WP:Wikipedia Education Program and student and faculty engagement in various public events which Wiki NYC has presented.
@Doc James, CFCF, and Lucas559: I would like for you to be aware of this event because you name yourselves as coordinators for the Translation Task Force. The LaGuardia nursing program, which with the rest of the school is part of the City University of New York system, is one of this event's presenters. I am recommending the translation of the leads of medical articles as one of the program activities. There have been other casual translation events in NYC in the past. This is the first event in NYC which we have actually called a "translatathon" and where we have featured the leads of these medical articles as ideal to translate.
For the rest of WikiProject Medicine, I would like to share the story of this event as an example of innovative outreach which would not be possible without a community base of editors who develop medical content. For other languages Wikipedia is often the only available source of health information, as equivalents of the NHS, CDC, and NIH do not exist for other languages, and the United Nations and World Health Organization only operate in a few languages. The idea of bringing health information into other languages has been an inspiring goal.
For this particular event we are assembling undergraduate students, including many 18-19 year olds for whom English is not their native language, and we have some faculty from the nursing program present to coach them on editing. This is a modest event, and includes anyone who wants to translate anything and not just medical content. For the medical content though, the basis is what is in English Wikipedia, which is the best free information which anyone in the world has to offer. Thanks to everyone here who develops the quality of this content. Blue Rasberry (talk)14:22, 25 April 2018 (UTC)
Thanks, Lane; that's an excellent initiative. I can be online and available as an extra pair of hands remotely up to around 14:45 EST if needed. Just drop a line on my talk page to attract my attention. --RexxS (talk) 22:52, 25 April 2018 (UTC)
Ah, yes, that time of year again (where I remember why I keep giving up on Wikipedia). From that list, I'll take parkinsonism. Also, ADHD was hit this week. I attempted (in vain) to have a discussion with the editor about appropriate sources. SandyGeorgia (Talk) 17:59, 23 April 2018 (UTC)
Parkinsonism was an improvement over what is typically seen with classroom editing projects; I was able to save four sentences. And, honestly, the article was a wreck before the student edited, so they at least chose a good target (which is rare), and did have some grasp of MEDRS sourcing (used mostly secondary reviews). But I did have to delete a lot of what they added because it was either poorly sourced, written in unencyclopedic tone, or didn't belong in that article, rather was already covered at Parkinson's disease, where it did belong. Still, much better than what we usually find from student editing, so I commend Se Lawson (talk·contribs) and hope they will pass that on the prof. The situation at ADHD was more frustrating. I tried to engage the student to explain sourcing, but they were having none of it, and none of their content was salvageable. SandyGeorgia (Talk) 23:42, 23 April 2018 (UTC)
Yeah, my comment was directed at the mess I saw at ADHD and another where Jytdog was involved haha. The few I looked at weren't overly bad, just poor grammar and punctuation (which is a problem site-wide, not just with classes). SEMMENDINGER (talk) 02:49, 24 April 2018 (UTC)
Inevitably, Wikipedia is maintaining a running commentary on this. Could probably be usefully added to a few medical editors' watchlists. Alexbrn (talk) 10:45, 27 April 2018 (UTC)
That seems over the top compared to say, NHS advice, and could be better integrated into the article. Most people have minor side effects, but that just means a sore arm. Bondegezou (talk) 15:47, 29 April 2018 (UTC)
Well, it's what the CDC says, and I had it all, so not sure why you say it's over the top. And I added it to the Side effects section-- how else would I better integrate it? Also, 1 out of 6 is a real number. And this sore arm was not like a typical vaccine sore arm, so it seems to me that the CDC has it right.
As a result, you are likely to have temporary side effects from getting the shots. The side effects may affect your ability to do normal daily activities for 2 to 3 days. Most people got a sore arm with mild or moderate pain after getting Shingrix, and some also had redness and swelling where they got the shot. Some people felt tired, had muscle pain, a headache, shivering, fever, stomach pain, or nausea. About 1 out of 6 people who got Shingrix experienced side effects that prevented them from doing regular activities. Symptoms went away on their own in about 2 to 3 days. Side effects were more common in younger people.
@Bondegezou: I was intending to add the NHS content to the article, when I realized it was not about Shingrix, but about Zostavax (scroll to the bottom of the page), which explains the difference. Best I am able to tell, Shingrix is not mentioned on the NHS website. SandyGeorgia (Talk) 16:55, 29 April 2018 (UTC)
I had Zostavax in the UK three days ago when I would have preferred Shingrix, which I was told has not (yet) been approved by NICE. It does not appear to be available in the UK privately either. Peter coxhead (talk) 20:05, 29 April 2018 (UTC)
When I was searching, I came across some place in the UK that was offering it, but I can't re-produce that. Just be sure to have it on a Friday, in case you end up like me! I think it's worth it, but I would have appreciated better disclosure from my doctor, as this was not a good time for me to be sick. SandyGeorgia (Talk) 21:05, 29 April 2018 (UTC)
I think the central concept, of "switching" is not sufficiently widely sourced so the article shouldn't exist. Some material may be salvageable to be merged elsewhere. Alexbrn (talk) 05:38, 28 April 2018 (UTC)
Dementia with Lewy bodies is "done" to the best of my ability. Once the fact/opinion issue is resolved, I would like to ask a Wikifriend for a thorough copyedit, so we (all who contributed) can take it to FAC, as a collaboration. So, for anyone who may be interested, now is a good time to comb through the content. Thanks in advance, SandyGeorgia (Talk) 15:02, 29 April 2018 (UTC)
Refusing to speak to someone is not a medical subject. The origin of the name (but not the behavior) is in the way that some (Western, mostly English-speaking) prisons treated their inmates. None of that sounds like this group. WhatamIdoing (talk) 15:22, 27 April 2018 (UTC)
The version before i edited it down was all full of pop-psych crap, see here.
I struggle with the perspective that psychology content is completely outside of what we do in WP:MED but please hear me when i say that i have not thought carefully about where the the not-MED line is. Jytdog (talk) 15:27, 27 April 2018 (UTC)
If you're not sure where MEDRS stops and psychology begins maybe don't edit articles where the line isn't clear to you. I don't agree with some of your edits on Silent Treatment and am wondering whether to make changes or not. Everything human beings do impacts their physiologies so its understandable that the line separating behaviour and health related articles is blurred. However, this is primarily an article about behavior not physical health so I don't think MEDRS applies. I also wonder if Silent Treatment is a clinical term; if not we don't necessarily need research papers to describe it.(Littleolive oil (talk) 15:57, 27 April 2018 (UTC))
I like it when people say that they don't know everything.
That seemed like an aggressive purge (e.g., blanking the paragraph that says it's a common tactic by bullies in the workplace), but looking at a few sources, I'm thinking that this might be a good candidate for a merge/redirect (as might several others). There are so many different terms for the same basic behavior. WhatamIdoing (talk) 20:59, 29 April 2018 (UTC)
I had the same thought, that there is a bunch of merging that could be done. maybe we would end up with enough sources by the end of that. Jytdog (talk) 05:02, 1 May 2018 (UTC)
The following discussion is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.
Hello, as I mentioned here, that text books said "adenoids are a symptomatic pathological hypertrophy of the nasopharyngeal tonsil. That in presence of certain predisposing factors (like allergy, environmental pollution..etc), abnormal hypertrophy of the nasopharyngeal tonsil occurs and normal physiological regression is slowed down (nasopharyngeal tonsil normally starts to diminish in size at the age of 7-8 years), and the hypertrophy condition here called adenoids". So if there's no objection I'll move the article from AdenoidtoPharyngeal tonsil?--Alaa :)..!11:35, 2 May 2018 (UTC)
The discussion above is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.
Draft: List of journals accused of being a predatory open access publisher
I think a List of journals accused of being a predatory open access publisher will be a good article. Before it goes live we can create a draft. Thoughts? QuackGuru (talk) 16:35, 15 April 2018 (UTC)
Bad idea. 1/ Will be an enormous list. Beall had over 1000 entries on his list. 2/ Near impossible to maintain. 3/ Magnet for edit warring between supporters and opponents of these journals. Note: Most of the entries in the above list (which is copied from Category:Potential predatory journals were placed in that cat by me, before giving up). --Randykitty (talk) 22:35, 15 April 2018 (UTC)
I'm not going to start a draft. I don't know all the sources to cite. If someone else creates it then I will pitch in. Someone who is familiar with the topic can provide sources here. QuackGuru (talk) 14:44, 17 April 2018 (UTC)
Neutral. I think we need very clear inclusion criteria, one of which should ideally be a secondary source that claims a publication is predatory. I think there is a lot to be said for maintaining such a list, if Quackguru is game. (Conflict of interest: I get spammed on an almost daily basis by predatory publishers wanting me to "submit my research" to them. All because my email address is on Pubmed.) JFW | T@lk18:30, 17 April 2018 (UTC)
I know very little about this topic. I will wait for sources and wait for others to start the draft. We don't need a source that claims a publication *is* predatory. There could be a source that claims a publication maybe a predatory or potentially or other similar words. In other words, we can follow each source accurately and include supported weasel words such as *possible* predatory. QuackGuru (talk) 20:18, 17 April 2018 (UTC)
Starting with Beall's list as a reference seems reasonable. Just make sure every item is referenced. One could group them alphabetically. We have larger lists than this. Doc James (talk · contribs · email) 10:20, 18 April 2018 (UTC)
This is a bad idea. It refers to Beall's list which has been challenged and withdrawn. This list will be out-dated, inaccurate and hedged with weaselly words like "accused", "potential". Yes, those of us who are in academia get invitations all the time to publish in "new" journals and would not aim for this or usually dream of citing them in WP reviews. But occasionally a relevant source may end up in one of them. For instance, World Journal of Gastroenterology has had mistakes along the way but now has an adequate review process and a reasonable impact factor in the top half of Gastro journals. Maybe we should just list journals with citation indices < 1 (or 2 or 20) as Potential low impact journals.Jrfw51 (talk) 12:57, 18 April 2018 (UTC)
Including supported weasel words will make it accurate. We can also include a list of journals with a zero impact factor in a separate section. The impact factor for World Journal of Gastroenterology has increased. I'm not sure if this should be included in the list for a new article. QuackGuru (talk) 13:19, 18 April 2018 (UTC)
I removed a comment that is or is very close to a BLP violation. That they oppose or support is not the issue. Jytdog (talk) 17:05, 18 April 2018 (UTC)
Per Headbomb, Randykitty, and others—we shouldn't be trying to place ourselves in the position of creating and curating a list of predatory publishers and journals. While such lists are useful and valuable resources, they're out of scope for Wikipedia's mission. Keeping such a list complete and up to date in perpetuity isn't something we can reliably and robustly do with Wikipedia's general volunteer labor pool, and presenting such a list that is incomplete and out of date does a disservice to our readers. Wikipedia can and should link appropriately to respected outside resources (through external links sections and inline references) on this topic, but we shouldn't try to become the last word ourselves. TenOfAllTrades(talk) 14:01, 20 April 2018 (UTC)
That being said, a Wikipedia-space worklist to make sure those aren't used in our articles for referencing things beyond WP:SELFSOURCE would be entirely fine. Headbomb {t · c · p · b}16:05, 20 April 2018 (UTC)
I agree. An 'internal' list of useful resources for identifying predatory publishers would be quite handy to have. Lists of publishers and individual journals would be, again, subject to concerns regarding completeness and curation, but editors – as opposed to readers – are much better positioned to understand the limitations of a work-in-progress crib sheet. Such a page might also be used retain and consolidate links to historical discussions on Wikipedia (on article talk pages and on noticeboards like WT:MED, WP:FTN, WP:RSN, etc.) about particular publishers/journals to help reduce the need to 'reinvent the wheel' when questions about a particular source arise.... TenOfAllTrades(talk) 17:43, 20 April 2018 (UTC)
I like this idea. On a couple of occasions I've had some citation edits reverted because the next editor knew the journal/book I was citing was unreliable for one reason or another - something I wouldn't have known without previous knowledge or a hard lit search. It would be a nice resource to check before including a journal/publisher/etc. It would also be a daunting task though...there's been hundreds of citations I've come across (usually through Google Books) that are just horrible and I couldn't imagine the process it would require to round those all up in a Wiki page. SEMMENDINGER (talk) 16:14, 23 April 2018 (UTC)
Well... It's great when folks can collaborate together like that, but I also hope that you'd think about whether the other person is correct. Over the years, I've had editors tell me that journals are bad because you have to buy the article, because it's not written in English, because it's not in a particular database, because it's WP:Impact factor is only the median for its field (most editors don't understand how low typical impact factors are, especially for specialized journals) – even because the editor-in-chief wasn't a successful businessman. WhatamIdoing (talk) 15:18, 24 April 2018 (UTC)
Frankly, I think the main problem here may be that we need to define what qualifies as an "accusation". Does it just have to be some random blogger calling a journal predatory for us to list it on our hypothetical list of such journals? What kind of sources would be used to decide whether a journal should be listed or not? This is aside from the other issues with such a list already mentioned above. Every morning(there's a halo...)23:49, 2 May 2018 (UTC)
A paper recently published in Molecular Autism (full text here) has claimed that, in Nazi Germany, Hans Asperger『joined several organizations affiliated with the NSDAP (although not the Nazi party itself), publicly legitimized race hygiene policies including forced sterilizations and, on several occasions, actively cooperated with the child ‘euthanasia’ program.』It has gotten a lot of media attention and I wanted to see if other editors think it is fairly incorporated into the current article on Asperger himself. Every morning(there's a halo...)21:06, 1 May 2018 (UTC)
This has been all over the news recently; I'm surprised that there hasn't been even more effort to expand upon possible Nazi ties. Looking at the article's talk page, I see that it's almost the only thing that readers and editors have posted about for years. WhatamIdoing (talk) 18:14, 3 May 2018 (UTC)
Greetings! I've been combing through stale drafts, and happened upon one User:Garfieldandcows/Pes anserinus bursitis. Wikipedia already has an article over this topic, at Pes anserine bursitis. However, the draft contains a number of useful pieces of information that should be merged into that article. Unfortunately, I lack any expertise in this area, meaning the merge could be better performed by someone here. I was wondering if someone could do me a favor and take care of that. —Compassionate727(T·C)02:19, 3 May 2018 (UTC)
What's needed right now is for someone to click these links and compare the side-by-side preview of the two parsers. If the "New" page looks okay, then something's maybe technically wrong with the HTML, but there's no immediate worry. If that column looks wrong, then it should be fixed.
The first list is all "deletable table" errors. If you want to know more about how to fix these pages, then see mw:Help:Extension:Linter/deletable-table-tag. Taking the first link as an example, there is highlighting in the wikitext that shows where the lint error is; it's in the ==I== section. The cause is probably the bad wikitext code at the end of the previous section, which currently ends with |-}. In the current parser, this error makes the H and I tables be connected; in the upcoming parser, it will make them separate but the ==I== section heading will still be misplaced. It should be an easy fix.
This second list is "misnested tags". See mw:Help:Extension:Linter/html5-misnesting for more information. For the first link, the highlighting indicates that the problem is in the ==References== section.
Hi everyone, thanks in advance for any help, it is much appreciated! Full disclosure about a potential COI, I am a medical student working for the non-profit Castleman Disease Collaborative Network.
I have been working to rewrite the page for Castleman disease. When I was considering my approach to rewriting the page I figured I would have to include 3 subcategories for each heading reflecting the 3 commonly accepted subtypes of the disease (Unicentric Castleman disease, HHV-8-associated multicentric Castleman disease, idiopathic multicentric Castleman disease). I thought that would be cumbersome and it would be better to have a separate page for each subtype instead. My feeling (which I believe reflects that of experts in the rather small field) is that these 3 diseases likely differ enough in pathogenesis, symptoms, treatment, and prognosis that they are best thought of independently. Recently published high impact articles tend to focus on a single subtype rather than all 3.
I am new to wikipedia and I was hoping to get feedback on:
1) Whether my approach with 3 articles makes sense
2) General feedback on my drafts, is the content appropriate? is the tone correct? Do I have enough sources?
3) What is the fastest way to get these articles up? Should I wait for the formal review process as I am currently doing?
4) Is my COI significant, I tried to be as unbiased as possible. I did mention the CDCN in the article as I feel it is a notable and valuable resource, but I understand if my COI might be concerning.
For rare diseases, it is normal and appropriate to mention the largest non-profit organization in the article.
I started an infobox at the top of the Draft:Unicentric Castleman disease. If you open the page in the visual editor, and click on it, then you can get a list of things you can add (like ICD-10 codes and OMIM numbers). Including an infobox is typical in this kind of article, but if you don't like it, then you can remove it. WhatamIdoing (talk) 21:32, 3 May 2018 (UTC)
Thanks so much for the help! I'll try add an infobox to the other pages and expand on the one you added to the UCD page. CDK55 (talk) 13:49, 4 May 2018 (UTC)
A few here might want to assess Olivia482 (talk·contribs)'s edits and help her improve as an editor. I've left a brief message on her talk page about WP:MEDRS. The good thing is that she is sourcing her material and it's usually not essay-like. Flyer22 Reborn (talk) 22:20, 6 May 2018 (UTC)
We have just been through a bit of a slog at the AfD about Greg J. Marchand (about to be deleted), an ob/gyn who got his MD at Spartan Health Sciences University, practices laparoscopic surgery, and likes to go after "world records" for removing biggest X and then put out press releases about them. He uses morcellation to get the big things out but still work laparoscopically.
Here is how it looked when it was created. I one point I pared it down to something as good-as-it-could be given the sources, and got this.
The socks argued that syndicated news stories about this guy each counted toward N and one of them wrote this: these 14 news stories did not come from a press release, they came from national reporter. The original story was produced by Wendy Chioji of Ivanhoe Media (they do a lot of the medical interest national stories for CBS, NBC, ABC. Her original story is easy to find so I suspect you already knew this. It's a real national story shared with many legitimate CBS, NBC, and ABC affiliate stations.
Nobody bought this argument, but it was such a clear (and egregious) example that I thought it worth posting at INDY, and did so here, and have made a bold edit to INDY to explicitly address syndicated stories in discussions of notability and weight.
But what I wanted to discuss here was Ivanhoe Broadcast News (I just nominated that for speedy as it is mostly a copy/paste from their website) which apparently creates pieces about "breakthroughs in medicine" and sells them to other news organizations. I don't know much about them. If they are doing legit news, or are really oriented toward doing PR, or if they don't care what subjects want and will just do anything if they think they can sell it. I can say that their piece on Marchand was pretty much a mouthpiece, and not at all independent journalism. (Here is the one piece i found with INDY reporting on Marchand; the Ivanhoe syndicated pieces - for example this, are nothing like that.)
Anyway, I wanted to post here to see if anybody is aware of Ivanhoe. ?? Their stuff is not MEDRS of course but there is lots of non-biomedical content we all deal with. Is anybody familiar with them? Jytdog (talk) 18:10, 5 May 2018 (UTC)
i checked at healthnewsreview.org and they have some discussion of ivanhoe:
Dean Edell, the syndicated multimedia medical reporter who calls himself "America's Doctor," has built a thriving business dispensing news and advice about everything from cancer treatments to erectile dysfunction. What followers of his "Medical Journal" on KGO Channel 7 may not realize is that the reporting he takes credit for on the air often is not his own. Many of his TV stories, along with transcripts under his byline on the KGO Web site, were taken nearly verbatim from a low-profile news service in Florida that mails out prepackaged video reports to more than 100 TV stations across the country.The company, Ivanhoe Broadcast News, allows local reporters to put their names on stories they didn't report, film or write -- without mentioning Ivanhoe. Stations also are permitted to omit geographical information, giving viewers the false impression that the stories were locally produced and the patients and doctors quoted in the stories could be their neighbors
There is nothing about Print syndication that makes it inherently non-independent.
However, WP:N has said (for years and years) that when the same story is republished in a bunch of different media outlets, that's still exactly one (1) story. WhatamIdoing (talk) 20:33, 5 May 2018 (UTC)
Multiple publications from the same author or organization are usually regarded as a single source for the purposes of establishing notability.
is liable to ambiguous interpretation (the problem is in the "or"). We know it means that when Wendy Chioji of Ivanhoe Media writes a story and gives it to multiple news stations, that counts for only one source for the purpose of satisfying GNG. But you only have to look at the socks voting "keep" at Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Greg J. Marchand to realise that the UPEs will read our policy as stating that each news station counts as a separate independent source becaus they are not the same organisation.
Examples:
"In the US [he] has articles all over the national news about him";
"There's no way this can fail WP:GNG. If you read WP:GNG it plainly says:""Independent of the subject" excludes works produced by the article's subject or someone affiliated with it. For example, advertising, press releases, autobiographies, and the subject's website are not considered independent." Individual ABC, NBC and CBS stations all over the nation ran the story.";
"That is not what WP:GNG says. It says they have to be independent from the Subject, not independent from each other. Most stories you see on the news will come from the same Associated Press press releases no matter where you are in the United States."
and so on. That's the sort of persuasive crap that leads to AfDs ending in "no consensus to delete", because not even the closers pay enough attention to the point that "1 story = 1 source for GNG". It's time you spruced up that policy again, WAID --RexxS (talk) 20:59, 5 May 2018 (UTC)
The snag with the current system is that you have to prove that the comments are coming from socks before their deceptive comments can be exposed for what they are. Most of the time we just don't know whether the SPAs are socks or not. I shudder to think how many AfDs may have given free passes to UPEs and their sockfarms because the nominator lacked Jytdog's insight and tenacity. My vote is for spelling the guidance out clearly in GNG. Something like
"Multiple publications from the same author or organization, and the same source repeated by multiple organizations are almost always regarded as a single source for the purposes of establishing notability."
I spent a little while looking into Ivanhoe. It appears that they're basically a standard news media organization. It's sort of freelancing on a larger scale: they write stories, and they sell stories to outlets. It's licensing rules are different from (i.e., worse than) the Associated Press's, but it's not necessarily different in kind. Since they are profitable, I assume that they're talking to media outlets about the kinds of content that will get bought, but I also assume that their independence is approximately the same as every other newsroom: they get jillions of press releases whether they want them or not, they are under a lot of time/productivity pressure, and they are more skilled than the average person at noticing when someone's trying to twist the facts.
I think that there may be some confusion of "hard-hitting" with "independent". Glowing puff pieces can be absolutely independent, just like critical pieces can be wildly non-independent (see: every attack ad ever published during a political campaign). You can build a journalistic career on writing positive stories, without compromising your independence. There's a market for good/hopeful news, especially for health content. WhatamIdoing (talk) 22:05, 5 May 2018 (UTC)
Thanks for your thoughts on Invanhoe, WAID. The whole point of journalistic independence is that we look for them to actually look into stuff and report what they find. A "piece" that is just a puff piece providing a mouthpiece for the subject is not independent, in the spirit of what we are looking for. This is a much murkier ball of wax, I know... Jytdog (talk) 23:50, 5 May 2018 (UTC)
No, that's not what journalistic independence means. Journalistic independence does not mean that you get a complete or accurate story. It means that you get a story that was published because the journalists (e.g., not the advertisers or the government) wanted to publish it.
This is why journalistic independence is so valuable for determining notability: the decision to publish a story on X tells us that someone with no vested interest in X thought that X was important enough to bring X to the attention of the world at large. WhatamIdoing (talk) 00:27, 6 May 2018 (UTC)
happy to have dialogue but I intended this thread to be about Ivanhoe as source of medical "news". My sense is we should avoid it like the plague.
Folks have seemed tetchy lately, about what is "in-scope" here on this talk page. The general issues should (in my view) be discussed at the INDY talk page, here as they are not specific to MED. If folks agree there, it might well be worth adding a clarification about syndidated stories at N, BIO, CORP, etc. but those are discussions for those guidelines/essays.... Jytdog (talk) 22:06, 5 May 2018 (UTC)
I think that Ivanhoe is probably every bit as good a source of medical news as your typical local newspaper.
I am curious where you draw the line between "medical news" and information that needs to meet MEDRS standards for biomedical content. WhatamIdoing (talk) 00:09, 6 May 2018 (UTC)
So something like Marchand getting a guinness world record would be Society and Culture. something about first X would be history (although popular media is generally bad for that). Perhaps for public controversy. That's not a surprising answer is it? Jytdog (talk) 00:53, 6 May 2018 (UTC)
I think that Ivanhoe is a reliable source for that kind of news.
I also think that news stories (in any typical news media) that are initiated through press releases and PR campaigns are reliable for that kind of news, too. What we need from a source for WP:V is a reason to think that the facts are accurate; a typical news story provides us with that. What we need from a source for WP:N is their "gatekeeper" function, to determine what deserves their readers' attention; the fact that they can't (and won't) run a story on every single press release provides us with that.
The main problem with the Marchand stuff isn't the "wow, modern medicine is so amazing" aspect of the stories. It's just that there's not much to say about him. Stripped of puffery, trivia, and stuff pulled from self-published and non-independent sources, the article would probably be a WP:PERMASTUB – a few sentences that would say little more than "He did this, and he was criticized for it". WhatamIdoing (talk) 21:33, 7 May 2018 (UTC)
BTW, no LUA was needed for this, and {{Infobox journal}} now supports |nlm=. It will prompt you to create relevant redirects if the parameter is not empty. Headbomb {t · c · p · b}01:01, 10 May 2018 (UTC)
For those interested in some background that led to this question, I recommend seeing my talk page, wherein Doc James and I discussed this matter. It also includes my rationale for at least selectively using Frontiers journals as citations to articles so long as the article or study being cited is otherwise acceptable, as well as my stated concerns about considering Frontiers Media to be a predatory publisher. As I said in the aforementioned talk page discussion, I agree that there appear to be some problems with Frontiers journals, but I would nonetheless consider it a problematic publisher (like with Hindawi Publishing Corporation) rather a predatory one. This conclusion was primarily based on a review of sources mentioning or otherwise discussing the status of Frontiers journals as predatory, which I deemed mixed and overall inconclusive. Links to those sources can be found on my talk page, as well.
Yes it depends on the claim. Any exceptional claim (e.g. of treatment efficacy) which appears only in a Frontiers journal is a huge WP:REDFLAG, and as for the AIDS denialism &c. stuff they've run .... In general anything worth including that appears in a Frontiers journal will almost certainly be source-able to something more conspicuously reputable. Same goes for Hindawi journals, PLOS ONE, etc. Most of the times we see these sources being raised from WP:PROFRINGE editors banging an altmed drum. Alexbrn (talk) 13:22, 28 March 2018 (UTC)
I definitely don't consider Frontiers journals to be predatory -- I have read dozens if not hundreds of useful articles in them. However, the fact that something is published in a Frontiers journal should not imply that it should be treated as a reliable source. They are better than things like Medical Hypotheses, but reliability is not their primary goal. Looie496 (talk) 15:24, 28 March 2018 (UTC)
We should lean on the side of caution if as reported we shold error on the right side. They are by far not alone ...as there are thousands of other publishers we can use instead. Editors are expected to uphold the integrity of Wikipedia....thus simply avoid questionable sources if we want to look credible.--Moxy (talk) 23:50, 28 March 2018 (UTC)
This was just added based on Frontier journal: "In vitro and in vivo studies found that methadone significantly inhibited the growth of human lung cancer cells"[36]
Yup, and it's wacky articles like this that exemplify why Frontiers journals need to be treated with extreme caution. Alexbrn (talk) 16:19, 29 March 2018 (UTC)
I actually think this Frontiers article is quite good, but the edit to the methadone article does not accurately reflect what it says. The Frontiers article notes that methadone has shown anti-tumor activity in preclinical studies, which is perfectly true; it also notes that these effects have not been tested at the clinical level. Looie496 (talk) 00:26, 1 April 2018 (UTC)
The specific subject of methadone as antineoplastic is reviewed in Int J Cancer at PMID29516505. No need to use the primary source. More generally though, it's worth restating that no source is reliable (or unreliable) for all statements: one can cite an issue of Mad Magazine for a statement describing the cover of that particular issue. LeadSongDogcome howl!18:05, 4 April 2018 (UTC)
It appears, at least to me, that the consensus (or lack thereof) on generally citing Frontiers journals has thus far remained the same as I described above. This discussion originated from my citation of two specific review articles, namely the following two: 1 and 2. Does anyone have any opinion on these two particular sources, especially as worthwhile additions to the Asperger syndrome, Autism, Autism spectrum, or other such article? I originally included it as another theory in Asperger syndrome § Mechanism and its reversion is what led to this. If any of you would like more context, I recommend reading the discussion on my talk page. Everything, including relevant diffs, is documented therein. ―Nøkkenbuer (talk • contribs) 08:48, 9 April 2018 (UTC)
Yeah, both URLs you give caused my browser to raise a security alert - so I wouldn't include those links! Alexbrn (talk) 09:06, 9 April 2018 (UTC)
It does for me, too, specifically SSL_ERROR_BAD_CERT_DOMAIN. This is because the certificate is not valid for the journal.frontiersin.org subdomain, only the www.frontiersin.org subdomain and the subdomain-free frontiersin.org. I have no clue why the website's certificate does not include the journal subdomain, even though it's just used as a hop to the www subdomain anyway (adding a temporary exception demonstrates as much). My guess is that someone misconfigured the certificate and nobody ever bothered to fix it. Regardless, the landing pages for each are as follows: 1 and 2. I was trying to include the original articles, but forgot about the subdomain nonsense. My apologies for not linking them initially, Alexbrn; it has been a long day for me.
So these sources are about the "Intense World Syndrome" which is the idea of a few researchers. The question is has this been picked up and discussed by decent secondary sources? If so, we can cite them; if not we ignore the topic as Wikipedia is meant to be a tertiary publication summarizing "accepted knowledge" (which is generally found only at the secondary level or deeper). Alexbrn (talk) 10:50, 9 April 2018 (UTC)
Actually, I think that might be a secondary source. It's not labeled as a review article, which is a particular type of secondary source, but it synthesizes previous work into a coherent whole. Putting together puzzle pieces is pretty much the definition of secondary. (Maybe you meant that this idea needed to be picked up by someone independent of the original authors?) WhatamIdoing (talk) 23:54, 9 April 2018 (UTC)
Well, I'm not sure what content the OP want to source, but if it's about the novel "hypothesis" of Intense World Syndrome so far as I can see these works are primary for that hypothesis. But yes coverage would need to be independent. Alexbrn (talk) 06:27, 10 April 2018 (UTC)
Yes, Alexbrn, I specifically want to include this "intense world" theory because I believe it is a relevant and appropriate addition to Asperger syndrome § Mechanism. I was simply stating the theory in a brief paragraph as a significant hypothesis for the neurological mechanism(s) behind Asperger syndrome and the autism spectrum alongside the others. The theory has been mentioned, discussed, or otherwise cited by hundreds of papers, if Google Scholaris any estimate; and it has received significant media coverage from reliable sources (some of which are listed on my talk page). I therefore think a paragraph on the theory is due.
What specifically would constitute sufficient "independent coverage" of this theory (or these specific papers) in your opinion? For example, do you basically just mean a review article about this theory and whatever research may have occurred since its publication by those "independent of the original authors" (asWhatamIdoing stated)? Or do you mean it in some other way? I apologize if my inexperience is showing; although I have been editing Wikipedia for years, I am still new to adding and editing medical content. ―Nøkkenbuer (talk • contribs) 15:36, 19 April 2018 (UTC)
According to the two articles, WhatamIdoing, they are indeed both labeled as review articles. I am talking about these two links specifically: 1 and 2. Am I misunderstanding something here? Are they not technically review articles? I agree that they are both secondary sources, though I understand Alexbrn's point that the "intense world" theory is primary to these papers and their authors. From what I can tell, if there is any basis for excluding these two particular sources, it appears to be on them not being secondary for the theory itself, despite otherwise satisfying WP:MEDRS. Perhaps that is what you meant? That they are not review articles for the theory itself, since the papers are the primary source for them? ―Nøkkenbuer (talk • contribs) 15:36, 19 April 2018 (UTC)
Usually – but not always, and it's not a requirement – journals submit metadata to PubMed about their articles, to identify things such as whether they're review articles. The PubMed records contain no such data for these papers. That's not proof that it's not a review article, but it does mean that the papers are excluded from search results (at PubMed) that are limited to review articles. WhatamIdoing (talk) 17:24, 19 April 2018 (UTC)
Thanks for the explanation, WhatamIdoing. I will be sure to keep that in mind in the future. I also appreciate the work you did to document the potential notability of this "intense world" theory. Given that you mentioned notability, however, do you think that it may be more prudent in this case to focus on developing a separate article about this before including it in a section like Asperger syndrome § Mechanism (which was the original edit)? Or should the focus—at least, at this time—remain with including it somewhere within an appropriate Wikipedia article, assuming it should be included at all? Perhaps someday this "intense world" theory will have its own article, anyway, but I am not sure if that day should be anytime soon. ―Nøkkenbuer (talk • contribs) 07:33, 10 May 2018 (UTC)
I think that this subject meets or exceeds the minimum requirement for having a stand-alone article about just IWS. However, considering everything, I think that you may have an easier time getting it mentioned (perhaps only briefly) in some article(s) first, and later creating the article specifically about that theory. WhatamIdoing (talk) 15:46, 10 May 2018 (UTC)
Intense world syndrome
I'm looking into this idea, and I think it's probably WP:Notable. Here's some sources:
"A prominent hypothesis about neurodevelopmental disorders in general and autism in particular is the intense world syndrome/theory of autism by Markram and Markram" [37]
"Two theories for which there is limited support but which have attracted much media attention deserve mention. These are the intense world syndrome theory and the broken mirror theory." [38]
"Perhaps autistics don't experience a socially numbed world but rather a socially intense world. In fact, Henry Markram, Tania Rinaldi, and Kamila Markram proposed such a theory in a 2007 article aptly titled,“The Intense World Syndrome—An Alternative Hypothesis for Autism."[39]
The following are all recent (within the last 6 weeks or so?) medicine-related links to DAB pages where expert attention seems needed. Some may need minor rewriting or unlinking. Two are about dinosaur anatomy, but I have a strong suspicion that paleontologists borrowed existing terms rather than attributed new meanings to existing ones. As always, search for "disam" in the displayed text; and if you solve one of these puzzles, remove the {{dn}} tag and post {{done}} here.