Wikipedia's Five Pillars

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Wikipedia is an online encyclopedia

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Wikipedia is a source for factual information. It is not to be used as a platform for advertisement or as a soapbox. Wikipedia is also not to be used as a dictionary, random collection of information, or news. There are sister projects, such as wiktionary for these purposes.

Wikipedia has a neutral point of view

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Wikipedia is not a platform to advocate your point of view on a subject. Articles are to remain neutral, presenting multiple view points when necessary without bias.

Wikipedia is free content

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Content directly posted on Wikipedia is free, and links and references should strive to also be free sources when possible. Copyright laws must be followed, and plagiarism is never permissible.

Wikipedians should interact in a respectful and civil manner

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While you may disagree with another person's edits, always be polite and civil when interacting with them. Always assume fellow wikipedians are acting in good faith, and never carry out personal attacks or edit wars.

Wikipedia does not have firm rules

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Wikipedia's rules are to be taken as general guidelines, and are likely to change over time. Don't be afraid to edit a page because you feel it might violate a rule or that you might make a mistake.


Summary of Characteristics of Target Article

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In this project, the goal is to take an article of stub quality and improve it to B or GA quality. A stub quality article is one with very little, basic information. A B quality article is a much more substantial article and provides a reasonable assessment of the subject. Citations and references are present and used correctly, and the article is also well-written, with an understandable flow. A GA, or good article, is one with a quality surpassing that of a B article. A GA article provides a broad and focused assessment of the topic, using many verifiable references, in-line citations, and no original research. Images are also present if possible, and are pertinent and captioned.

Practice Citations

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Bacteriophage therapy (often referred to as simply phage therapy) is the process of using bacteriophages to treat bacterial infections. Due to the increasing prevalence of antibiotic resistant pathogens, phage therapy has been recently considered as an alternative to traditional antibiotic treatment.[1] However, the therapeutic use of phages is not a new development. The first reported use of phage therapy was in France in 1919, when microbiologist Felix d'Herelle used them to successfully treat a child with dysentery.[2] After the discovery and mass production of traditional antibiotics, the use phage therapy has mainly been confined to Europe, particularly in Eastern Europe and Russia.[1] [2] There are several advantages in using bacteriophages over antibiotics, including their ability to replicate at the infection site, evolve with their host to counter phage-resistance, and lack of serious side effects. Phages are also very specific, targeting only a certain bacterial species. While this prevents the destruction of the normal microflora, it also means that the source of the infection must be properly identified before treatment is given.[2]

References

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  1. ^ a b Golkar, Z (2014 Feb 13). "Bacteriophage therapy: a potential solution for the antibiotic resistance crisis". Journal of Infection in Developing Countries. 8 (2): 129–36. doi:10.3855/jidc.3573. PMID 24518621. {{cite journal}}: Check date values in: |date= (help); Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help)
  2. ^ a b c Sulakvelidze, A.; Alavidze, Z.; Morris Jr, J. G. (2001 Mar). "Bacteriophage therapy". Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy. 45 (3): 649–59. doi:10.1128/AAC.45.3.649-659.2001. PMC 90351. PMID 11181338. {{cite journal}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)