Wikipedia:GLAM/Wellcome/Resources

=Resources= If you have specific questions about any page, or would like to propose major edits to overhaul something, it's always worth checking out the "Talk" page for the article. Look for the tab at the top to read what discussions people have already had or add your own topic of discussion. When you are on the Talk page, you can click "New section" to add a new topic of discussion, or "Edit" to add to an existing conversation.

You can also check out what's been done before on any page by clicking "View history" at the top.

Help to Edit
If you'd like to edit Wikipedia, you definitely should! It's a lot easier than most people expect. To help you to edit, here are some useful guides:

Inspiration/Sources for Edits
The Wellcome has a number of resources that might help provide information or inspiration for Wiki-pages or edits. Many items have been digitised and can be accessed online anywhere. Other items can be accessed at the Library by signing up for a free library card: you can register online and order items in advance so they're waiting for you on your arrival.

Women Medics
Emma Milliken has compiled an index to the obituaries of Medical Women's Federation members that are contained in issues of its Quarterly or Journal, (which can be found on the catalogue record page). Lots of these women doctors have not yet got Wikipedia pages, though likely several of them do fit notability criteria. The Wellcome Library's holdings of these issues could be really useful to anyone interested in adding some important women to Wikipedia.

Key Figures in Nursing History
Many of the Royal College of Nursing Presidents don't yet have pages on Wikipedia (or else have quite sparse ones!) - they are certainly notable, so if you'd like to add a page please look at the list on the RCN wiki-page and get editing!

The Wellcome Library Blog
The Wellcome Library Blog is a great source of inspiration for people, places, and things to edit. Even if a page exists for the topic, quite often it'll be missing some of the fascinating information that the librarian blog-author has included. Even better: you can link to the Blog as a source!

Digitised Materials
The Wellcome Library has digitised thousands and thousands of pages of material and made them available online. Take a look at the Wellcome Library Digital Collections to find anything from Arabic manuscripts to Sexology and all kinds of things in between. A few particularly large collections are covered in slightly more detail below...

UK Medical Heritage Library
The UK Medical Heritage Library is a huge digital repository of medical books, from textbooks to monographs and pamphlets. The UKMHL covers a vast array of topics in medicine and welfare, so take a look and see if it could be useful as a source or as inspiration for a post.

Digitised Mental Healthcare Materials
The historical records of a number of UK psychiatric institutions and personnel are in the process of being digitised and can be found here. For each set of archive files, there are descriptions of the place/person they're about, which could form the basis of some new pages or improvements to pages (all content on the website is licenced under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International licence unless otherwise stated).

Codebreakers (History of genetics pages for improvement)
Some articles on people who played a role in the history of genetics could be much improved, and these might be a good starting point for those unfamiliar to editing. They are listed below, with links to the Wikipedia pages and to some sources from the Wellcome to get you started:
 * C.P. Blacker doesn't have an infobox. There's also more information to add about him here.
 * Malcolm Ferguson-Smith doesn't have an infobox, and his page is a little sparse. There's some relevant information and pictures here.
 * Hans Grüneberg's page is almost all bullet-points. Information and pictures can be found here.
 * Arthur Mourant's page is not particularly extensive at present. Relevant information/images are here.
 * Lionel Penrose's page is quite brief at present, though well referenced. Information on Penrose to use in building up the page is located here.
 * Guido Pontecorvo's page is mostly bullet-points and could be significantly extended using this profile.
 * Robert Russell Race has a page which only consists of about one paragraph. Ruth Sanger's is only marginally better. There is some information to use in improving their pages here.

Mental Health & Psychiatry Things from the Library
A thematic search of Wellcome library materials in the Alpha Catalogue for mental health and psychiatry turn up lots of people, linked topics or subtopics, and books (some digitised, some not). Take a look!

Medical Officer of Health Reports
The Wellcome have digitised thousands of Medical Officer of Health Reports for London from 1848-1972. These reports contain both statistical information (which might be of interest to Wikidata users) and narrative accounts of many varied things that affected the health of Londoners. There are many results concerning psychiatric topics. Click View Tables Only to filter the results to show only show data (which can be exported).

Images
There are tens of thousands (97,460 at current count!) images from the Wellcome Library on Wikimedia Commons. Please use and reuse them!

How to Add Images to Pages
Adding these Wellcome images to Wikimedia projects is done in the same way on all projects except Wikidata:

For instructions of how to add images to Wikimedia projects using Visual Editor please click here. To edit a page simply click edit at the top of any article. To add an image to a Wikidata item:
 * 1) Use the search tool above to find an image you would like to use on Wikidata and copy the file name
 * 2) Use the search tool on Wikidata to find a suitable article
 * 3) Scroll down to the bottom of the list of properties and click + add
 * 4) Use image as the property field and paste in the name of the file into the box that appears
 * 5) Click ✓ save

How to Find Unused Images
Below are some lists to help you to find unused Wellcome media relating to mental health and psychiatry, so that you can use them in your language on different Wikimedia projects.

To use the list simply: Lists are arranged with the largest languages at the top, click to sort a-z. From the list you can click on the image to see the full description on Wikimedia Commons.
 * 1) Click ▼ next to the Wikimedia project name.
 * 2) Click on a language to see all the content files that have not been added to that project in that language..

Wikipedia ▼ Wikidata ▼ Wikivoyage ▼ Wikibooks ▼ Wikiversity ▼

A full list of all of the Wellcome Library images that relate to the history of mental health and psychiatry, including both used and unused, can be found here.