More than 2 billion pairs of eyeballs: Why aren’t you sharing medical knowledge on Wikipedia?
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Wikipedia is the largest knowledge dissemination platform in the world. The English-language medical pages registered more than 2.4 billion visits in 2017, eclipsing websites like those of WHO, the NHS and WebMD.1 The lay language focus of the site obviously attracts patients, but surveys show that medical trainees at all levels report regular use.2 3 Health professionals also regularly visit Wikipedia, once referred to as a ‘guilty secret’ of doctors and academics.4 The first step in knowledge translation is to put information where the people who want it can access it. Your patients are reading Wikipedia and your students are studying with Wikipedia. You have used it too, although you might not admit it in a crowd. And yet health researchers and policy-makers aren’t sharing their knowledge there. Instead, many reinvent the wheel: showcasing fancy, expensive new websites running parallel to the world’s most frequently used medical information resource.
Wikipedia disrupted the process of knowledge sharing through its philosophy of crowd-sourced …
[1] David Matheson,et al. Wikipedia as Informal Self-Education for Clinical Decision-Making in Medical Practice , 2017 .
[2] Jake Orlowitz,et al. Why Medical Schools Should Embrace Wikipedia: Final-Year Medical Student Contributions to Wikipedia Articles for Academic Credit at One School , 2016, Academic medicine : journal of the Association of American Medical Colleges.
[3] Kristine Elliott,et al. Selection and Use of Online Learning Resources by First-Year Medical Students: Cross-Sectional Study , 2017, JMIR medical education.