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Author Topic: Scientists & Wikpedia  (Read 571 times)

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Offline libby

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Scientists & Wikpedia
« on: July 28, 2009, 08:53:18 AM »

Online Research
Scientists Become Wiki-Wise

NIH Staffers Get Into the Wiki World

With more and more people searching for medical advice on-line, NIH researchers decided it was time to post the facts on Wikipedia.

By Ibby Caputo
Washington Post Staff Writer
July 28, 2009

What is acetaminophen made from? Does heartburn lead to Barrett's esophagus? Will your 3-year-old outgrow her stutter?

When Americans have questions like those, one of the first places they go for answers is online. At some point, many end up at Wikipedia.

"More and more people are using the Web to get their health information to augment what they learn from their physicians," says John T. Burklow, the public liaison for the National Institutes of Health. A recent survey by the Pew Internet & American Life Project shows that researching health information is the third most popular online activity among adults, after e-mail and general searching.

To make that online information more reliable, NIH is encouraging its scientists and science writers to edit and even initiate Wikipedia articles in their fields. This month, it joined with the Wikimedia Foundation, which publishes the cyber encyclopedia, to host "Wikipedia Academy," a training session on the tools and rules of wiki culture at NIH headquarters in Bethesda.

Over the course of a day, more than two dozen Wikipedia volunteers--just a few of the 4,000 people who edit English-language Wikipedia articles at least five times a month--gave presentations promoting the open-source encyclopedia and encouraging about 100 NIH employees to become editors. The volunteer instructors, or "Wikipedians," were not just technogeeks; they also included scientists who could appreciate the questions NIH staffers might have. Attendees were shown how to use the template that produces a Wikipedia article with its embedded table of contents and multiple links; they also discussed topics such as managing the quality of articles and the verifiability of information.

Among those at the event was Ronald Summers, a radiologist at the NIH Clinical Center, who is trying to find ways to spot early colorectal cancer. He said he had thought about contributing to Wikipedia before but had been intimidated by its complexity.

"It seemed like they had a special language you had to use to format the articles," Summers said.

Wikipedia articles (there are more than 2.9 million of them in English) can be initiated and edited by anyone who can access the Web site. Quality is informally monitored by fellow users, who can make corrections and change the text freely. All information that is posted is supposed to include citations so a reader can check the primary sources of the data.

By law, NIH must make its health and science articles publicly available within a year after they appear in peer-reviewed journals. A collaboration with the Wikimedia Foundation seemed natural, Burklow said, because NIH and the foundation share a common goal "that the information on Wikipedia is of the highest quality and up-to-date."

Since the workshop, Summers has edited his first Wikipedia article, though he would not disclose the topic because editors are supposed to be anonymous.

"As it turned out, it was a very simple structure with headings and indentation level," Summers said. "You could learn it in just a few minutes."

Comments:caputoi@washpost.com

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Offline Graybeard

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Re: Scientists & Wikpedia
« Reply #1 on: July 31, 2009, 07:15:56 AM »
Quote
Wikipedia articles (there are more than 2.9 million of them in English) can be initiated and edited by anyone who can access the Web site. Quality is informally monitored by fellow users, who can make corrections and change the text freely. All information that is posted is supposed to include citations so a reader can check the primary sources of the data.


Yep, sounds like a real good place to look for facts.  :roflmao:

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Offline libby

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Re: Scientists & Wikpedia
« Reply #2 on: July 31, 2009, 09:11:09 PM »
Indeed it is. (If wikipedia's good enough for NIH, it's good enough for me. I do believe in going straight to reputable verifiable sources.)

The Nation's Medical Research Agency

The National Institutes of Health (NIH), a part of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, is the primary Federal agency for conducting and supporting medical research.

Helping to lead the way toward important medical discoveries that improve people's health and save lives, NIH scientists investigate ways to prevent disease as well as the causes, treatments, and even cures for common and rare diseases. Composed of 27 Institutes and Centers, the NIH provides leadership and financial support to researchers in every state and throughout the world.

For over a century, the National Institutes of Health has played an important role in improving the health of the nation. The NIH traces its roots to 1887 with the creation of the Laboratory of Hygiene at the Marine Hospital in Staten Island, NY.

The NIH is an agency of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. With the headquarters in Bethesda, Maryland, the NIH has more than 18,000 employees on the main campus and at satellite sites across the country.

With the support of the American people, the NIH annually invests over $28 billion in medical research. More than 83% of the NIH's funding is awarded through almost 50,000 competitive grants to more than 325,000 researchers at over 3,000 universities, medical schools, and other research institutions in every state and around the world. About 10% of the NIH's budget supports projects conducted by nearly 6,000 scientists in its own laboratories, most of which are on the NIH campus in Bethesda, Maryland.

Improving Health and Saving Lives
Many important health and medical discoveries of the last century resulted from research supported by the National Institutes of Health. The NIH translates research results into interventions and communicates research findings to patients and their families, health care providers and the general public. In part because of NIH research, our citizens are living longer and better. Life expectancy at birth was only 47 years in 1900; by 2000, it was almost 77 years.

In the past several decades, NIH-supported research, and its national programs to communicate the results of research, played a major role in achievements such as:
Death rates from heart disease and stroke fell by 40% and 51%, respectively, between 1975 and 2000.

The overall five-year survival rate for childhood cancers rose to nearly 80% during the 1990s from under 60% in the 1970s.

The number of AIDS-related deaths fell by about 70% between 1995 and 2001.

Sudden infant death syndrome rates fell by more than 50% between 1994 and 2000.

Infectious diseases--such as rubella, whooping cough, and pneumococcal pneumonia that once killed and disabled millions of people--are now prevented by vaccines.

Quality of life for 19 million Americans suffering with depression has improved as a result of more effective medication and psychotherapy.

Medical Discovery
The National Institutes of Health supports and conducts medical research to understand how the human body works and to gain insight into countless diseases and disorders, from rare and unusual diseases to more familiar ones like the common cold. It supports a wide spectrum of research, from learning how the brain becomes addicted to alcohol to combating heart disease. The NIH is at the forefront of new progress in medical research:

The sequencing of the human genome set a new course for developing ways to diagnose and treat diseases like cancer, Parkinson's Disease and Alzheimer's Disease, as well as rare diseases.

In response to the anthrax attacks of 2001, the NIH launched and expanded research to prevent, detect, diagnose, and treat diseases caused by potential bioterrorism agents.

New and improved imaging techniques let scientists painlessly look inside the body and detect disease in its earliest stages when it is often most effectively treated.

Researchers aggressively pursue ways to make effective vaccines for deadly diseases like HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis, malaria, and potential agents of bioterrorism.

Progress in understanding the immune system may lead to new ways to treat and cure diabetes, arthritis, asthma and allergies.
New, more precise ways to treat cancer are emerging, such as drugs that zero in on abnormal proteins in cancer cells.

Novel research methods are being developed that can identify the causes of outbreaks, such as Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS), in weeks rather than months or years.

Scientific Leadership
In every state across the country, the NIH supports research at hospitals, universities and medical schools. The NIH is training the current and next generation of researchers to ensure that the capability to advance medical science remains strong. Many of these scientists-in-training will go on to become leading medical researchers and educators at universities; medical, dental, nursing, and pharmacy schools; schools of public health; non-profit health research foundations; and private medical research laboratories around the country.

As a Federal agency, the NIH considers many different perspectives in establishing research priorities. A very competitive peer-review system identifies and funds the most promising and highest quality research to address these priorities. This research includes studies that ultimately touch the lives of all people.

The NIH's own scientists, and scientists working with support from the NIH grants and contracts, have been responsible for countless medical advances. More than 100 of these scientists have received Nobel Prizes in recognition of their work.

At the forefront of research, the NIH focuses on current and emerging public health needs and promising areas of science. The NIH makes medical breakthroughs happen to improve people's health and save lives.

This page was last reviewed on June 19, 2007 .
 
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libby



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« Last Edit: July 31, 2009, 09:21:23 PM by libby »
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Offline Tony Light

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Re: Scientists & Wikpedia
« Reply #3 on: September 02, 2009, 11:36:11 AM »
Life expectancy at birth was only 47 years in 1900; by 2000, it was almost 77 years.

In the past several decades, NIH-supported research, and its national programs to communicate the results of research, played a major role in achievements such as:
Death rates from heart disease and stroke fell by 40% and 51%, respectively, between 1975 and 2000.

The overall five-year survival rate for childhood cancers rose to nearly 80% during the 1990s from under 60% in the 1970s.

The number of AIDS-related deaths fell by about 70% between 1995 and 2001.

Sudden infant death syndrome rates fell by more than 50% between 1994 and 2000.

Infectious diseases--such as rubella, whooping cough, and pneumococcal pneumonia that once killed and disabled millions of people--are now prevented by vaccines.

Quality of life for 19 million Americans suffering with depression has improved as a result of more effective medication and psychotherapy.
----------------------------

How in the world did we do that with the health system we now have. According to some, we have the worst stats in the world. Man, you learn something everyday. Or, maybe all of this good news just happened in the last eight months.

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Offline libby

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Re: Scientists & Wikpedia
« Reply #4 on: September 03, 2009, 09:21:31 AM »
It all depends on how you look at it Tony.

I don't think anybody's faulting science or doctors.

The problem is, how do we find the money to pay the hospitals and doctors?

 libby

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Offline Tony Light

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Re: Scientists & Wikpedia
« Reply #5 on: September 06, 2009, 06:40:48 PM »
It all depends on how you look at it Tony.

I don't think anybody's faulting science or doctors.

The problem is, how do we find the money to pay the hospitals and doctors?

 libby


According to Obami, you reduce reimbursement rates and cut 500 billion from medicare. Wait, that wont work will it?

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Offline libby

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Re: Scientists & Wikpedia
« Reply #6 on: September 07, 2009, 12:57:31 PM »
Tony, While you may be happy with an insurance company person evaluating and deciding how much they will pay for what your doctor says is needed to palliate or cure whatever health problems you have, I am all for cutting out the middle man and letting my doctor deal directly with a primary payer (a government funded agency like Medicare, for instance). Read the following letter from yesterday's Washingtn Post for a real-person example:

How's Your Health Care?
A Controlled Experiment

When my father died last year, I inherited a 15-inch stack of medical bills. I sorted it into two piles: Medicare vs. private supplemental insurance.

The Medicare statements, I quickly discovered, required zero work. They were all paid. Amazed, I simply threw them away.

In contrast, the private insurer tried every trick in the book to deny coverage. I spent countless hours studying arcane denial codes, phoning the insurance company, waiting on hold, wrangling with the company's representatives, and faxing and re-faxing documentation, all while fending off increasingly threatening bill collectors. After months of fighting, the private insurer finally paid up.

It was like a controlled experiment: Same patient, same costly treatments, same excellent doctors.

Which was better? The government-run insurer that simply paid the bills or the private insurer that fought me tooth and nail?

The private insurer was more efficient at only one thing: denying claims. If I were eligible for Medicare or a new public plan, I'd sign up today.

--Tom Smerling, Chevy Chase (Maryland)

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« Last Edit: September 07, 2009, 04:54:31 PM by libby »
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