Wikipedia:WikiProject Women in Red/Meetup/263
Health | April 2023
April:
Continuing, till 15 April:
2023 global initiatives:
See also:
Welcome to WikiProject Women in Red (WiR)! |
---|
Our objective is to turn red links into blue ones. Our project's scope is women's representation on all language Wikipedias (biographies, women's works, women's issues, broadly construed). Did you know that, according to Humaniki, only 20.003% of the English Wikipedia's biographies are about women? Not impressed? Content gender gap is a form of systemic bias, and this is what WiR addresses. We invite you to participate, whenever you like, in whatever way suits you and your schedule. Editors of all genders are equally and warmly welcome at Women in Red! |
Welcome!
Online event 1–30 April 2023 | |
---|---|
Use social media to promote our work! | |
---|---|
Wiki Women in Red | |
@wikiwomeninred | |
@wikiwomeninred | |
2023 editathons | |
Hashtag | #wikiwomeninred |
Add to article talk pages | |
---|---|
. |
|
We would like to see articles on historical figures as well as those around the globe who have become notable for their contributions to Covid-19 assignments. See also: Wikipedia:WikiProject COVID-19.
We hope both inexperienced and seasoned editors will join us in creating biographies and other articles about notable women.
This virtual editathon allows enthusiasts wherever they may be to participate in our initiative. Contributors are of course also welcome to add articles on any other women who deserve to be covered, for example under the topics of the month or our comprehensive #1day1woman priority.
The main goals of the event are:
- to encourage inexperienced editors and show them how they can contribute to Wikipedia by creating biographies of prominent women
- to draw the attention of more experienced editors to the need for concerted action in combating the systemic bias against the coverage of women and women's works
- to promote the new and improved articles and images through social media and via nominations to Main Page features "Did You Know?" and "In The News".
What else?
- Below, you'll see a section where you can list the articles you create month by month, and another section where you can add the images you have uploaded to Commons.
- This essay on creating women's biographies and our Ten Simple Rules might be helpful to newer editors.
- If you share any of the articles or images on social media, or successfully nominate for Main Page, please indicate you have done so next to the article name.
Thank you
Redlists (lists of redlinked articles to be created)
editA wide variety of redlink lists can be found on our Redlist index. Some of those relating to healthcare are listed below:
|
Add other red links here, if possible with a source:
Epidemiologists
edit- Siranuysh Aghajanyan
- Varvara Alexanyan
- Gohar Ghukasyan
- Arina Harutyunyan
- Fenya Tsaturyan
- Mariam Davydovna Oleynik
- Elisabeth Cardis Mersch
- Tanis Kershaw Senior Epidemiologist, Outbreak Management Division public Health Agency of Canada[1]
- Claudie Laprise senior EPIDEMIOLOGIST Public Health Agency of Canada
- Nimâ Machouf
- Linda Vrbova
- Kvetoslava Kotrbová
- Jarmila Rážová
- Pavla Svrčinová
- Tyra Grove Krause
- Françoise Clavel-Chapelon
- Marina Kvaskoff
- Uduak Okomo[2]
- Sabine Gabrysch
- Caroline Herr
- Anna Kühne
- Eva Rehfuess
- Meike Stoverock
- Amabélia Rodrigues
- Dorit Isaac
- Mira Stulman-Friedman, Seems to use Mira Stulman professionally
- Chiara DiGirolamo Social Epidemiologist
- Mio Ozawa nutritional epidemiology
- Oliva López Arellano
- Rosalba Rojas Martínez
- Jackie Benschop
- Andrea 't Mannetje
- Reremoana Theodore
- Maria Christine Magnus
- Grażyna Broda
- Irena Głowaczewska
- Marta Wawrzynowicz-Syczewska
- Arpik Hasratyan
- Nina Syomina
- Milica Valentinčič–Petrović
- Nina Pirnat
- Milica Valentinčič–Petrović
- Azucena Bardají
- Magda Campins Martí
- Dolores Corella Piquer
- Katja Fall, Örebro University
- Nataliya Vynograd
- Anna Cassell
- Amelia Harshfield
- Kirsty Rhodes
- Helen Whelton
- Elaine Abrams Columbia University
- Solveig Argeseanu Cunningham[3]
- Paris Adkins-Jackson[4]
- Julie E. Buring[5]
- Dhayana Dallmeier
- Brenda Heaton
- Katelyn Jetelina[6]
- Melissa Marzán[7]
- Nicola McKeown nutritional epidemiology
- Amanda Simanek, University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee
- Deirdre Tobias obesity and nutritional epidemiologist at Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health and Brigham and Women's Hospital[8]
- Julia Wei Wu Harvard University project working on now Designing pooled next generation sequencing algorithms for affordable HIV drug resistance surveillance in Africa
Microbiologists
edit- Katherine J. Wu,[9][10] a journalist and Ph.D. in microbiology and immunobiology from Harvard University, who rose to prominence after covering science, health and the COVID-19 pandemic for The New York Times and The Atlantic.
Participants
editOutcomes (articles)
editNew or upgraded articles
editMost recent on top, please, specifying upgraded if not new
- Amanda Simanek
- Carmen Williams
- Caroline Breese Hall
- Daisy Bridges - PIN
- Natalia Șoșeva
- Meredith Yeager - PIN
- Heather Cameron (neuroscientist) - PIN
- Maureen Black
- Stefanie N. Vogel
- Michelle G. Giglio
- Clara E. Hill
- Valerija Raulinaitis - PIN
- Mary Runnells Bird - PIN
- Jane Elizabeth Hoyt-Stevens - PIN
- Yulia Petrovna Vrevskaya - PIN
- Adelina Tuitt
- Eliza Lo Chin - PIN
- Silvia Calzón - PIN
- Connie Newman
- Rotonya M. Carr
- Anna-Kaarina Aalto - PIN
- Jasmine Brown
- Lucille C. Gunning - new, PIN
- Else Kienle
- Nim Tottenham - improved
- # Irene Jakab - new, PIN
- Ilona Tóth (also 265), PIN
- Cleora Augusta Stevens Seaman - PIN
- Etta Gray - PIN
- Sandy Skinner
- Maya Green
- Gisela Biedermann
- Katherine Manion - add img, infobox, links, PIN
- Mabel Evelyn Elliott - PIN
- Love Gantt -add img, PIN
- Maria Stromberger (also 265) - PIN
- Martha Tracy -added 2nd img, PIN
- Helen Morton (physician) - PIN
- Linda Aldoory
- Trinidad Arroyo (also 265)
- Frances M. Hollingshead - PIN
- Aura Timen - also WiR 265
- Marion L. Bugbee - PIN, TW
- Emmi Mäkelin - PIN. TW
- Frances Sage Bradley - PIN, TW
- Karina Walters - PIN, TW
- Elizabeth Cisney Smith - PIN, TW
- Effie Raitt - PIN, TW
Promote our work
editKey:
- Add FB after the article if you mention it on Facebook
- Add PIN after the article if you pin the image on Pinterest
- Add TW after the article if you tweet it on Twitter
- Add IG after the article if you post in on Instagram
- Add LI after the article if you post it on LinkedIn
- Add ITN after the article if it was posted on the main page via WP:In The News
Did you know? articles
edit- ... that Caroline Breese Hall and her father, who were both pediatricians, once wrote the same book? (2023-06-05)
Outcomes (media)
edit- Please add this category to the image if you're uploading it to Commons: Media supported by WikiProject Women in Red - 2023
Add here – most recent at the top
-
Trinidad Arroyo voting
References
edit- ^ "Meet the Outbreak Management Division at the Public Health Agency of Canada". Government of Canada. Retrieved 16 September 2022.
- ^ "Uduak Okomo". London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. Retrieved 12 November 2022.
- ^ "Solving Argeseanu Cunningham". Rollins School of Public Health. Emory University. Retrieved 13 September 2022.
- ^ Perez Ortega, Rodrigo (June 15, 2022). "To capture racism's impact on health, one epidemiologist suggests going beyond conventional methods". Science Insider. Retrieved 17 September 2022.
- ^ "Julie E. Buring Sc.D." BU School of Public Health. Retrieved 13 September 2022.
- ^ "An epidemiologist breaks down the numbers on Johnson & Johnson's single-dose vaccine". UTHealth. Retrieved 13 September 2022.
- ^ "Miss World 2021 postponed hours before finale amid Covid-19 outbreak". CNN. December 17, 2021. Retrieved 17 September 2022.
- ^ "Deirdre K. Tobias". Google Scholar. Retrieved 13 September 2022.
- ^ "Katherine J. Wu". The New York Times. Retrieved 27 March 2023.
- ^ "The Atlantic Hires Katherine Wu as Staff Writer". The Atlantic. 13 January 2021. Retrieved 27 March 2023.
Event templates
edit- Invitation: April 2023
- Editathon banner for talk pages – Health Template:WIR-263:
{{WIR-263}}