Wikipedia:University of Edinburgh/Events and Workshops/History of Medicine 2017
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Booking
[edit]You can book your place for one day or both days through Eventbrite:
About the event
[edit]Have you ever wondered why the information in Wikipedia is extensive for some topics and scarce for others? During the University of Edinburgh's February term break, the University's Information Services team, in association with Surgeons' Hall Museums, will run Wikipedia 'editathons' focusing on improving the quality of articles about the history of medicine.
Join us to celebrate the lives & contributions of women in medicine, over sixty years of Nursing Studies & seventy-five years of the Polish School of Medicine. Unravel myths, discover truths, create & re-write the Wikipedia pages of Scotland’s famous, and infamous, medical figures including gruesome body-snatcher William Burke and intriguing alumni Dr. James Miranda Barry. Come join us for all the fun and gain digital skills, learn how to edit Wikipedia, explore our history and harness the power of the web for public engagement. Refreshments provided.
No prior knowledge is necessary as full training is given. Attendees will be supported to develop articles covering areas which could stand to be improved. Namely: Edinburgh as the birth place of medicine, distinguished Edinburgh alumni, historic locations etc.
With guest speakers, an end of day tour of the Surgeons’ Hall museum and plenty of refreshments to support you to improve Wikipedia’s coverage of medicine-related content, you’ll learn how to edit and participate in an open knowledge community.
Participants can attend one day or both and will be supported to develop articles of their choice related to the history of medicine. NB: Please bring a laptop along to the event or email me at ewan.mcandrew@ed.ac.uk if you require to borrow one for the event.
Programme for Thursday 23 February
[edit]- 12pm to 12.15pm – Housekeeping and Welcome.
- 12.15pm to 12.45pm – Guest Speakers
- Iain MacIntyre – The Scottish and British Societies of the History of Medicine
- Alice Doyle - The Lothian Health Services Archive
- Steve Sturdy – The History of Medicine
- 12.45pm to 2pm – Wikipedia editing training
- 2pm to 4.30pm – Researching and editing Wikipedia pages.
- 4.30pm to 5pm – Transferring to Wikipedia’s livespace.
- 5pm to 5.30pm – End of day treat: Tour of Surgeons’ Hall Museums.
Programme for Friday 24 February
[edit]- 12pm to 12.15pm – Housekeeping and Welcome.
- 12.15pm to 12.45pm – Guest Speakers
- Janet Philp – Uncovering Burke and Hare
- David Wright - An Illustrated History of Scottish Medicine - the inside story
- Daisy Cunynghame – The Royal College of Physicians
- 12.45pm to 2pm – Wikipedia editing training
- 2pm to 4.30pm – Researching and editing Wikipedia pages.
- 4.30pm to 5pm – Transferring to Wikipedia’s livespace.
- 5pm to 5.30pm – End of day treat: Tour of Surgeons’ Hall Museums.
How do I prepare?
[edit]Once you have registered to attend, there are a few things you can do to prepare before you attend:
- Create a Wikipedia account
- Learn about editing if you like: visit the Wikipedia Tutorial, or Getting started on Wikipedia for more information
- Think about what article you would like to edit - you can even prepare some materials to bring with you on the day
- Bring a laptop - the room being used has a monitor for each table but this will be used to project information on during the event. There will be 4-way adaptors provided should you need to charge your laptop.
- Note, light refreshments will be provided (tea, coffee, juice, nibbles etc.)
Looking for ideas?
[edit]- List of Edinburgh University medical people
- List of Edinburgh alumni who are health professionals
- List of Edinburgh medical alumni born in Edinburgh
Articles to edit
[edit]- James Barry (surgeon)
- Leith Hospital - Being worked on by Iain Macintyre and David Wright.
- Ethel Moir - Nurse with the Scottish Women's Hospital during WW1 (a contemporary of Elsie Inglis) - - Being edited by LornaMCampbell[1] [2]
There’s a long long trail a winding vol 1 There’s a long long trail a winding vol 2 There’s a long long trail a winding vol 3 [3] [4] [5]
- Lilias Mary Grant - Nurse with the Scottish Women's Hospital during WW1 and friend of Ethel Moir.
- Scottish Women's Hospitals for Foreign Service
- Surgeons' Hall
- William Mackenzie (ophthalmologist) – Glasgow ophthalmologist [6][7][8]
- John Macintyre* – Glasgow radiologist
- Graham Teasdale (neurosurgeon)[9][10]
- Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Glasgow - [11][12][13][14]
- Burke and Hare murders
- Royal Hospital for Sick Children, Edinburgh - [15][16][17][18][19]
- Douglas Guthrie - Scottish medical doctor, otolaryngologist and historian of medicine. (This article is only a stub article so could greatly be expanded on given what we know about Donald Guthrie.
Polish School of Medicine
[edit]- The Polish School of Medicine - being created by Jacek
- Francis Albert Eley Crew
- Antoni Tomasz Jurasz
- Krystyna Magdalena Munk
- Henryk Podlewski (link also from http://en.wiki.x.io/wiki/1968_New_Year_Honours)
- Jakub Rostowski
- Hanna Segal (nee Poznanska)
- Wiktor Tomaszewski - Being worked on by Maria
- Henrich Urich - Being worked on by Maria
Women in medicine
[edit]- Professor Anne Ferguson (physician) (née Glen) - Herald obit[20][21]
- Alice Hunter - surgeon
- Prue Barron -surgeon
- Cathy Burt - physician
- Kate Hermann - neurologist
- Dorothy Child - anaesthetist
- Dorothy Geddes - dentist Article[22]World-Changing achievement:[23]Herald Obituary: [24]
- Elizabeth Robertson (physician) - Royal Edinburgh Hospital - see also http://www.lhsa.lib.ed.ac.uk/exhibits/spotlight/eliz_robertson.htm
- Rebecca Strong (nee Thorogood) – Glasgow nurse who pioneered apprenticeship training for nurses. Being worked on by Clare Harrison [25][26][27]
- Nancy Loudon - Scottish gynaecologist and pioneer of family planning and well woman services. Edited by Sarah Kneale. Being translated into Italian by Elena.
- Elizabeth Wilson (doctor) - Right-to-die campaigner. Herald obituary; Scotsman obituary. Being worked on by Mattaea.
Hospitals
[edit]- Edenhall Hospital
- Eastern General Hospital - Worked on by Alice Doyle
- Deaconess Hospital
- Edinburgh City Hospital - https://academic.oup.com/jac/article/46/3/521/881918/The-Edinburgh-City-Hospital-Matrons-Medics-and, http://www.edinphoto.org.uk/0_B/0_buildings_-_city_hospital.htm check copyright, The Edinburgh City Hospital by James A. Gray (ISBN: 9781862320963), http://www.lhsa.lib.ed.ac.uk/exhibits/hosp_hist/city.htm
- Glasgow Eye Infirmary - [28][29]
- Glasgow Royal Infirmary School of Nursing - [30]
PhD theses
[edit]- Gavin Willshaw is adding Thomas Jehu's PhD thesis to Wikisource.
In addition
[edit]- There is scope to add pages to the category: Fellows of the Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh.
Lists of suggested or requested articles to create or improve can be added here. Please feel free to make your own suggestions.
Material
[edit]Participants are also encouraged to make full use of the University of Edinburgh's extensive online resources, such as databases and e-journals, as well as any of their own research material that they may have access to.
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Video: Creating a user page
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Video: Talk pages
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Video: Sandboxes
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Video: Basic editing techniques
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Video: Improving an article on Wikipedia
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Video: Creating an article on Wikipedia
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Video: Understanding Wiki Categories
Attendees
[edit]Once you have signed up and created your Wikipedia account, why not add your username below? Don't worry about formatting if you aren't sure, we can help you on the day!
- Ewan McAndrew (User:Stinglehammer)
- Gavin Willshaw (User:Gweduni)
- Eoin (Eoinho (talk) 22:27, 23 February 2017 (UTC))
Trainers
[edit]List of buildings to photograph
[edit]Did you know that a Wikipedia article with an image is around 50% more likely to be clicked on & read than one without an image attached?
Here are some notable locations in Edinburgh that could use some photographs to improve their visibility on Wikipedia. If you see these buildings, please stop to take a photo which can then be uploaded to Wikipedia during the editathon on a CC-0 or CC-BY-SA open licence.
An ad-hoc map of the following address can be found at https://mapalist.com/map/573668 Eoin (talk) 11:29, 17 February 2016 (GMT)
Address | Historic Scotland Reference | Listing | Significance |
---|---|---|---|
3-6 Atholl Crescent | 28260 | A | Second site of Edinburgh School of Cookery and Domestic Economy |
2 Brandon Street | 28341 | B | Site of Lilian Lindsay’s dental practice |
16 Chambers Street | 27991 | B | Site of Chambers Street Union, previously Edinburgh University Women’s Union |
30 Chambers Street | 27622 | B | Site of Medical College for Women |
31 Chambers Street | 27622 | B | Site of Edinburgh Dental Hospital and School when Lilian Lindsay matriculated. |
5 Chester Street | 28517 | B | Home of Sarah Mair and the Ladies' Edinburgh Debating Society |
Court of Session, Parliament Square | 27699 | A | |
Crew Laboratory Building | Unknown | N/A | Former site of Charlotte Auerbach's mutagenesis unit |
1 Drummond Street | 29795 | B | First site of Edinburgh Dental Dispensary |
Dunfermline College of Physical Education | N/A-RCAHMS | N/A | College for women trainee PE teachers, merged with Moray House |
8 East Suffolk Road | 30050 | B | Formerly Suffolk Halls of Residence |
St. John's Hill | N/A | N/A | Site of former Edinburgh School Board Day Industrial School
no wiki article found, Flora Stephenson wiki refers but includes building photo, ragged school wiki no direct ref Eoin (talk) 14:51, 17 February 2016 (GMT) |
94 and 96 Spring Gardens | 30200 | C | Former site of the Elsie Inglis Memorial Hospital Nurses' Home |
175 Comely Bank Road | 30045 | N/A | Flora Stevenson Primary School |
3,5,7, George Square | 28002 | B | Former site of the George Watson's Ladies College |
11 George Square | N/A-RCAHMS | N/A | Site of Elsie Inglis’s George Square Nursing Home; demolished in 1960s |
31 George Square | 50191 | B | Original site of Masson Hall; demolished in 1960s |
54 George Square | N/A-RCAHMS | N/A | Second site of Edinburgh University Women’s Union; demolished in 1960s |
58 Great King Street | 28965 | A | Final Edinburgh home of David Masson |
6 Grove Street | 28981 | B | Site of the Edinburgh Provident Dispensary for Women and Children |
73 Grove Street | N/A-NatArchives | N/A | Site of the Edinburgh Provident Dispensary for Women and Children |
219 High Street | 29047 | A | Site of Elsie Inglis’s Hospice |
1 Inverleith Terrace | 30186 | B | Base of Edinburgh Ladies Education Association |
5 Lauriston Lane | N/A-RCAHMS | N/A | Site of Edinburgh Dental Hospital and School when Lilian Lindsay matriculated |
(8?) 10 Mill Lane | 27822 | N/A | Site of Leith Hospital
Note: Current property information lists the Leith Hospital site at 8 Mill Lane, with the adjacent Fever Hospital site at 15 Mill Lane. |
53 Lothian Street | 30137 | A | First site of Edinburgh University Women’s Union |
4 Manor Place | 29300 | B | Site of Sophia Jex-Blake’s first practice |
Moray House School of Education | |||
13 Randolph Crescent | 29601 | A | Home of Flora and Louisa Stevenson
2 Photos taken and uploaded to Wikimedia Commons by MaryHutchison on 18/02/16
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10 Regent Terrace | 49773 | A | Second Edinburgh home of David Masson |
3 Rosebery Crescent | 29658 | C | First Edinburgh home of David Masson |
8 St. John Street | 29729 | B | Moray House Hostel, for women trainee teachers |
15 Shandwick Place | 47728 | C | Base of Edinburgh Association for the University Education of Women
Photographed, uploaded and inserted in http://en.wiki.x.io/wiki/Edinburgh_Association_for_the_University_Education_of_Women Eoin (talk) 11:29, 17 February 2016 (GMT) |
25 Shandwick Place | 30176 | C | First site of Edinburgh School of Cookery and Domestic Economy
Photographed and uploaded to File:25 Shandwick Place North view 01.png & File:25 Shandwick Place North East view.png Neither Historic Scotland ref left, nor http://en.wiki.x.io/wiki/Queen_Margaret_University mention the exact address. Image not inserted in article. Eoin (talk) 12:25, 17 February 2016 (GMT) |
Sheriff Court, 27 Chambers Street | 27981 | N/A | RCAHMS |
2 South Lauder Road | 30680 | B | Second site of Masson Hall |
Surgeon's Hall, Nicolson Street | 27772 | A | |
High School Yards | 28003 | B | Site of the old Surgeons' Hall and Surgeons' Square; site of Edinburgh School of Medicine for Women |
8 Walker Street | 29881 | B | Site of Elsie Inglis’s surgery |
92 Whitehouse Loan | N/A-NatArchives | Site of Sophia Jex-Blake’s second surgery and later the Edinburgh Hospital and Dispensary for Women and Children (or Bruntsfield Hospital) | |
University of Edinburgh Archaeology Dept | 27999 | B | Site of old Surgical Hospital 1832; site of old City Hospital for Infectious Diseases |
Outcomes
[edit]Articles created or improved, and other outcomes from the editathons as they develop
Articles improved
[edit]- Burke and Hare murders - Image added of facial reconstruction of William Burke. William Burke's place of birth added as Orrey from his confession. Other corrections made to the article e.g. date of birth and removing the surname Croswhaite from Joseph as no citation and not found in other material.
- John Barclay (anatomist) - An eminent Scottish comparative anatomist, extramural teacher in anatomy, and director of the Highland Society of Scotland. New paragraph added on Barclay's candidacy for the chair of comparative anatomy. Further information on Barclay's Life and organisation.
- Leith Hospital - 21 paragraphs added.
- Thomas Keith (doctor) - Added Early life, photographic career, surgical career. A Victorian surgeon and amateur photographer from Scotland. He developed and improved the wax paper process and his photographs are recognised for their composition and use of shade. He was an early practitioner of the operation of ovariotomy (ovarian cystectomy) where his published results were amongst the best in the world.
- Scottish Women's Hospitals for Foreign Service - Infobox added and relocated images.
- Edinburgh Pharmacopoeia - 3 paragraphs added. The Edinburgh Pharmacopoeia was a medical guide consisting of recipes and methods for making medicine. It was first published by the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh in 1699 as the Pharmacopoea Collegii Regii Medicorum Edimburgensium. The Edinburgh Pharmacopeia merged with the London and Dublin Pharmacopoeia's in 1864 creating the British Pharmacopoeia.
- Royal Hospital for Sick Children, Edinburgh - more information about the future of the hospital added and the various buildings on the current site.
- Infobox added to Hanna Segal - British psychoanalyst and a follower of Melanie Klein. She was president of the British Psychoanalytical Society, vice-president of the International Psychoanalytical Association, and was appointed to the Freud Memorial Chair at University College, London (UCL) in 1987. James Grotstein considered that "Received wisdom suggests that she is the doyen of "classical" Kleinian thinking and technique."
- Information added about the Polish School of Medicine to the article about Francis Albert Eley Crew - English animal geneticist. He was a pioneer in his field leading to Edinburgh’s place as a world leader in the science of animal genetics. He was the first Director of the Institute of Animal Breeding and the first Professor of Animal Genetics. He is said to have laid the foundations of medical genetics.
- Small amendments and a new Publications section added to Douglas Guthrie - Scottish medical doctor, otolaryngologist and historian of medicine.
Articles created
[edit]- Rebecca Strong - English nurse who pioneered preliminary training for nurses.
- Kate Hermann - the first female neurology consultant in Scotland. Hermann, who was Jewish, left with her family from Hamburg to London in 1937, fleeing the Nazis. She then moved, in 1938, to Edinburgh to study at the Royal Infirmary under Professor Norman Dott.
- Anne_Ferguson (physician) - Scottish physician, clinical researcher and expert in inflammatory bowel disease. She was educated at Notre Dame School and The University of Glasgow, graduating with a first class honours degree in Physiology, and winning the Brunton Medal. In 1975 she was appointed as a Senior Lecturer at The University of Edinburgh, also becoming a Consultant at the Gastrointestinal Unit at the Western General Hospital in Edinburgh. In 1987 she was appointed to a personal professorship in gastroenterology, and was honoured by election as a Fellow to the Royal Society of Edinburgh in 1990.
- Ethel Moir - WW1 nurse with the Scottish Women's Hospitals for Foreign Service.
- The Polish School of Medicine - Terrific new illustrated 2200 word article.
- Henryk Podlewski - Polish doctor who completed his studies at the Polish School of Medicine at the University of Edinburgh during World War II and became the first Psychiatrist to practice in the Bahamas.
- Nancy Loudon - Scottish gynaecologist. She devoted her professional life to pioneering and ensuring provision of family planning and well woman services. As such she was a fore-runner in what is now the specialty of 'community gynaecology'. This article is now translated on to the Italian Wikipedia.
- Krystyna Magdalena Munk - a Polish doctor who completed her studies at the Polish School of Medicine at the University of Edinburgh during World War II.
- Elizabeth Wilson (doctor) - Family Planning Doctor and Right-to-Die campaigner. She founded the 408 Clinic, and FATE (Friends at the End) in 2000.
Other outcomes and coverage
[edit]- Gweduni added Thomas Jehu's PhD thesis to Wikisource, the free content library, and proofread all 31 out of 31 OCR-ed pages.
- Glasgow Cathedral has been translated to Japanese Wikipedia.
- Brown dog affair has been translated to Japanese Wikipedia.
- Refrigerator death has been translated to Japanese Wikipedia.
- Gomphus clavatus has been translated to Japanese Wikipedia.