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Wikipedia as informal self-education for clinical decision-making in medical practice

Wikipedia as informal self-education for clinical decision-making in medical practice
Wikipedia as informal self-education for clinical decision-making in medical practice
Background: for almost any topic, a Wikipedia page will appear among the first ten items of a search online. Wikipedia is also a site whose quality and reliability has been called into question.

Methods: in this paper, we aim to discuss medical practitioners’ use of Wikipedia, what this consists of and what it might be. We consider the context and history of Wikipedia before discussing the relationship between Wikipedia and the medical profession. In so doing, we will consider Wikipedia as a means of informal self-education and the extent to which it might inform clinical decision-making. We compare with the existing literature results from our two small-scale empirical studies of Wikipedia and clinical decision-making.

Results: notwithstanding issues over quality and reliability, Wikipedia’s rules on verifiability are such that its articles are very heavily referenced, and this is just as true of health-related articles. The Cochrane/Wikipedia Initiative in improving the quality and reliability of medical and health pages in Wikipedia is significant in increasing reliability. Our respondents largely concurred with the results from earlier studies on the use of Wikipedia by medical practitioners.

Conclusion: perhaps the very doubt over Wikipedia’s accuracy is its greatest strength as a means of informal education of doctors. That medical and health articles on Wikipedia can be so fully referenced and still be doubted is arguably a good thing and one whose effects may be spread into other, more trusted, publications. Hence, one might envisage a future where no one source is taken automatically on trust.
Wikipedia, Informal education, Continued professional development, Medical education
1874-2203
15-25
Matheson-Monnet, Catherine
609d16bf-fe81-4fcd-8f6c-91431c55a9fc
Matheson, David J.
eba46032-8552-450d-b585-3ead28373850
Matheson-Monnet, Catherine
609d16bf-fe81-4fcd-8f6c-91431c55a9fc
Matheson, David J.
eba46032-8552-450d-b585-3ead28373850

Matheson-Monnet, Catherine and Matheson, David J. (2017) Wikipedia as informal self-education for clinical decision-making in medical practice. Open Medicine Journal, 4 (1), 15-25. (doi:10.2174/1874220301704010015).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: for almost any topic, a Wikipedia page will appear among the first ten items of a search online. Wikipedia is also a site whose quality and reliability has been called into question.

Methods: in this paper, we aim to discuss medical practitioners’ use of Wikipedia, what this consists of and what it might be. We consider the context and history of Wikipedia before discussing the relationship between Wikipedia and the medical profession. In so doing, we will consider Wikipedia as a means of informal self-education and the extent to which it might inform clinical decision-making. We compare with the existing literature results from our two small-scale empirical studies of Wikipedia and clinical decision-making.

Results: notwithstanding issues over quality and reliability, Wikipedia’s rules on verifiability are such that its articles are very heavily referenced, and this is just as true of health-related articles. The Cochrane/Wikipedia Initiative in improving the quality and reliability of medical and health pages in Wikipedia is significant in increasing reliability. Our respondents largely concurred with the results from earlier studies on the use of Wikipedia by medical practitioners.

Conclusion: perhaps the very doubt over Wikipedia’s accuracy is its greatest strength as a means of informal education of doctors. That medical and health articles on Wikipedia can be so fully referenced and still be doubted is arguably a good thing and one whose effects may be spread into other, more trusted, publications. Hence, one might envisage a future where no one source is taken automatically on trust.

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MEDJ-4-15 - Version of Record
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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 3 May 2017
e-pub ahead of print date: 17 July 2017
Published date: 30 September 2017
Keywords: Wikipedia, Informal education, Continued professional development, Medical education

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 415212
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/415212
ISSN: 1874-2203
PURE UUID: 5fb88deb-ce37-4385-b4a1-226699c272d4

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Date deposited: 02 Nov 2017 17:30
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 16:35

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Author: David J. Matheson

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