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Guide to Creating a Disease Page

Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]; Associate Editor(s)-in-Chief: Charmaine Patel, M.D. [2]

Introduction

Introduction

The following is a guide to creating your chapters and microchapters. A chapter is a collections of smaller chapters called microchapters. For instance, the disease pericarditis is a chapter composed of multiple microchapters such as pericarditis overview, pericarditis pathophysiology, pericarditis treatment etc. Microchapters allow users to access the content they are looking for more efficiently, allows ease in navigating the website, and maintains completeness and consistency of Wikidoc pages. The templates listed below contain standardized language that will assist you in creating and editing your microchapters. Before getting started, it is important to get acclimated, and to learn some of the basics about formatting. Here is a checklist of things to do before creating your page:

  1. Make sure you have a login username and password. For help with logging in, click here.
  2. View and practice navigating some pages with microchapters. To see a list of our best pages, type into the search box “Category:Best pages”. Click here to see the page on pericarditis. To view a more extensively microchaptered page, click here to see the page on chronic stable angina.
  3. View a short video about creating pages. Look at the Getting Started video by clicking here.
  4. Get acquainted with some basic formatting by clicking here.
  5. Keep a few tabs of Wikidoc open on your browser while working, so you can reference this page and the other help pages such as the Cheat Sheet on the Wikidoc homepage frequently.
How to Create a Microchaptered Page

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Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1] Associate Editor(s)-in-Chief: Charmaine Patel, M.D. [2] Sabawoon Mirwais, M.B.B.S, M.D.[3]

How Do I Search For The Page I Want to Create?

  • First you need to search for the disease name of the page you are creating to see if the page already exists. For more information on searching, click here. You should also search for synonyms or other names of the disease, so that you do not duplicate content.
  • If the page already exists, but is not microchaptered, you may create a new microchaptered page for the disease and then re-organize the old contents into a microchaptered page.
  • Only microchapter the page if it is over one-and-a-half pages in length, and there is enough or will be enough content to be put into microchapters.
  • This can be done by following the instructions below to create a microchapter template, and then simply copying and pasting the information you are re-organizing into the standardized microchapters.

How Do I Create A Microchapter Template?

  • If the disease page does not exist, you will create a new microchaptered page using the following directions. For example, if you were creating a page on jaundice that did not exist:
    • First you need to go to the page WikiDoc Disease Microchapter Template.
    • Click on the “edit source” tab, and copy all of the text in the edit box.
    • Type into the main WikiDoc search box “Template:Jaundice” (without the quotation marks).
    • Click on where it says “Create the page Template:Jaundice on this Wiki“.
    • Click on the “edit source” tab, and paste all of the microchapter template information into the edit box.
    • The top of the edit box has two blank boxes, the top one with binocular icons next to it, and the bottom one with red arrows next to it. In the top box put “type page name here“, and in the bottom box type the name of the disease page you are creating.
    • Click on the red arrows at the right side of the bottom box, and continue to click on it until you get to end of the edit box. This will put the disease name in all the microchapter navigation boxes, so that they link to the appropriate pages.
    • Remove cells that are not relevant to the disease that you are working on.
    • Click save at the bottom of the edit box.
  • You now have a microchapter navigation template which will be inserted in all of the microchapter pages you create.

How Do I Create the Microchaptered Home Page?

  • Search in the Wikidoc search box for the disease name. It is a good idea to search for synonyms of the disease name, so that if someone has already created a similar page, you can add new content, or incorporate the old content into a new page.
  • For example, for jaundice, search for “Jaundice”, then click on where it says “Create the page Jaundice on this Wiki”.
  • You would then type in the edit box {{Jaundice}}.
  • Click save at the bottom of the edit box, and the main page should show the microchapters listed on the right side of the main page.
  • You will use the microchapter template in all of the subsequent microchapter pages you eventually make by typing into the edit box {{jaundice}}. This leads to ease of navigation, as regardless of which microchapter page you are viewing, you can easily click back to the home page or to other microchapter pages.
  • The home page also contains links to the individual microchapter pages, in the appropriate order, as seen here. For this you would type into the edit box of the home page ==[[Jaundice historical perspective|Historical Perspective]]==. On the left side of the vertical line in the brackets is the link to the page, and on the right side is how we want the link to appear on the page. It would look like this on the main page Historical Perspective.
  • You can use the template found here.
    • Copy all the template information in the edit box.
    • Paste it into the home page of the microchapter you are creating.
    • Use search and replace; so put “Type page name here” in the top window, and the name of the disease (i.e., Jaundice) in the lower box. Click the red button on the right side of these boxes to replace the terms.
    • Remove links that are not relevant to the disease that you are creating. The links on the home page should match, and be in the same order, as the cells in the microchapter navigation template.
  • As you can see, although the microchapter pages only have the first letter of the heading capitalized, the way that the links appear on the home page is different. It is important to maintain consistency, so as an example to reference capitalizations and correct nomenclature, click here.

How Do I Create the Individual Pages Within a Microchaptered Page?

  • The home page will show the microchapter navigation template on the right of the screen, and the headings of the microchapters in the middle section of the page, which will also link to the microchapters.
  • To view this on a home page, and practice navigating a microchaptered page, click here.
  • As you create new microchapter pages, you will create a link on the home page.
  • To create a new microchapter page, click on the appropriate section within the microchapter navigation template on the home page.
  • Click on “Create the page _____ on this wiki!
  • Create the page using the appropriate template listed on the main page. Be sure to include the microchapter navigation template {{jaundice}} on each microchapter page.

References and Sources

  • If the content for the page is obtained from a general source, such as a website or a textbook, list under a heading at the bottom of the page titled “Sources”
  • If the content is obtained from a journal article or another article, list under a heading at the bottom of the page titled “References”.
What to Put at the Top of Every Page

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Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1] Associate Editor(s)-in-Chief: Charmaine Patel, M.D. [2]Sabawoon Mirwais, M.B.B.S, M.D.[3]

What Do I Put At The Top of Every Edit Box?

  • After creating a new disease page:
    1. At the very top of the edit box, type in __NOTOC__. There are two underscores on each side of NOTOC and NOTOC itself stands for “no table of contents“.
    2. Type in the microchapter template which you have created, which for jaundice, for example, would be {{Jaundice}}.
    3. Make a link to the patient information page, on the main disease page. For example, for pericarditis, you would type into the edit box, ”’For patient information, click [[Pericarditis (patient information)|here]]”’ which would appear on the page as For patient information, click here. The square brackets create a link to the disease page. On the left side of the vertical bar in the square brackets is the page you are linking to, on the right side, is the word you want to appear on the page. Bold the statement, and place it at the top of the edit box, before {{CMG}}.
    4. Then type in the template for the Editor-in-Chief, Dr. C. Michael Gibson, by typing in {{CMG}} into the edit box. The brackets around CMG are flower/curvy brackets. On the page it would appear as Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [4]
    5. Then type in the edit box {{AE}} which will appear on the page as Associate Editor(s)-in-Chief:
    6. You would then put in your own user template, which is shown below:

How Do I Create My Name Template?

  • Create a name template, using the following instructions:
    • Your name template will link to your user page, so the reader is able to find out a bit about who you are. You should have a user page which was created when you first logged in to WikiDoc. For instructions on creating a user page, click here.
    • Type “Template:your initials” in the search box. If your name were John Doe, you would search for “template:JD”. In the edit box, you would type [[User:John Doe|John Doe M.D.]]. On the left side of the vertical line in the square brackets, is the link to your user page. On the right side of the vertical line in the square brackets, is how you will want your name to appear at the top of the page. Click save.
    • Then whenever John Doe M.D. wants his name to appear at the top of the page, with a link to his user page, he would just have to type in {{JD}}.
  • The edit box for John Doe creating a page on Jaundice, would then look like this:

__NOTOC__ {{Jaundice}} {{CMG}} {{AE}} {{JD}}

On the page it would appear at the top as such: Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [5] Associate Editor(s)-in-Chief: John Doe M.D.

  • After this line, you would add a line for synonyms and keywords for the disease if there are any. This is detailed in the next section on the main help page.
Appropriate Sources for Creating Your Page

Appropriate Sources for Creating Your Page

Copyleft sources are sources of information that can be freely copied and used. You cannot use copyrighted information in this way. The pages listed below represent commonly used copyleft sources.

Templates for Each Microchapter Page

Templates for Each Microchapter Page

  • Below are each of the important sections that you will need to make your microchaptered page.
  • Click on each heading / page name to go to the template page.
  • At the beginning of each page is an introduction to guide you before starting the page. This is not part of the template.
  • After that is the template for the page with the actual headings (and correct capitalizations) that you can use for your page. A brief description of what each section should entail is given under each heading.
    • The way these headings are written, especially capitalization, are not suggestions. They are the precise way each and every heading should be presented. Consistency is the key.
  • Insert the disease you are describing, wherever it says (disease name). If you are describing a condition or symptom, also insert it in place of where it says (disease name) and change the other headings accordingly.
  • You may not always need to use all the headings in the page to describe a given disease.

Template:WH Template:WS

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