Wikipedia:Good lede


 * Part of the Medical Translation Project

Good ledes are articles on health topics which have passed through quality control and are accepted for translation as part of the Medical Translation Project. When a number of criteria are met the article may be accepted in the list of short articles ready for translation. This page explains these standards and which topics are sufficiently important to translate.


 * Version to translate will be copied to the subspace (where additional modifications such as removing pronunciation or English specific info can be done)
 * e.g. Wikipedia:WikiProject Medicine/Translation task force/RTT/Simple / Cellulitis Original article available at Cellulitis

Criteria
Full translations focus on Good article or Featured article content, where no additional criteria must be fulfilled. To broaden the scope and the amount of articles we have found many languages are most interested in short summaries of topics. This drove the adoption of our goal to translate 1000 articles into 100 languages, also known as the 100 X 1000 Project. Despite decreased length quality standards are very high, and the criteria are similar to the Good article criteria!

A good short article or good lede consists of an English lede that is &mdash;  :  ; and .   :  ;  ; and <li>.</li> </ol> <li>:</li> <ol STYLE="list-style-type: lower-alpha"> <li>; and</li> <li>.</li> </ol> <li>.</li> <li>.</li> <li>:</li> <ol STYLE="list-style-type: lower-alpha"> <li>; and</li> <li>. </li> </ol> </ol>

Additional criteria
In addition the following criteria need also be filled: Lede contents: Normally these paragraphs are marked in Wiki-markup with:
 * Lede size (including infoboxes, images and reference table) should not exceed 8–12kB.
 * Ledes should include 3 or 4 paragraphs
 * Content is ordered within the lead, the same as the recommended section ordering in the manual of style for medical articles.
 * 1st paragraph is a brief definition and signs/symptoms.
 * 2nd paragraph is cause, mechanism of disease, and diagnosis.
 * 3rd paragraph is prevention and treatment.
 * 4th paragraph is epidemiology, prognosis, society and culture, and history.
 * The lead needs to be written in English that is as simple as possible while the content remains medically correct.

Whether the target Wikipedia chooses to keep these as hidden comments or to use them as independent headers is up to them.

Excluding the non-essential
The final version is moved to a work space on En Wikipedia and typically excludes the following content:

Content

 * Etymology is often not worth translating. The history of a word is seldom relevant when translated. Sometimes the Latin word is the most common term, but even when it is ask yourself – will it be the most common term in Somali?

Templates
Few templates are installed universally. It requires significant effort from us just to make sure templates which give functionality are present. For this reason you should consider if templates is unnecessary.

Each template removed before translation means 100 templates less to remove later on from already translated articles!

Examples of templates to be removed:
 * TOC limit – normally only used on long articles. If we're only going to be translating the lede there is no point in keeping this template
 * IPAc-en or IPA – adds English pronunciation guides, not applicable on non-English Wikipedias
 * DEFAULTSORT: – Gives limited functionality and since names are translated as well it will only need to be deleted later on
 * Hatnotes such as About or Distinguish
 * Subsection notes such as Main or See further – if we're translating an article on Diabetes it is unlikely there will be an article on Diabetes management on the target Wikipedia.
 * External links templates – Even if external links are included they should be changed from template form into link form. This means adding [] around the link such as [link] . Note: Does not include infobox templates

Extra guidelines
Because of the potential these articles have of being translated into many different languages they need to be inclusive of a worldwide view on the subject.

Guidelines/help on how to achieve this can be sought at:
 * WP:Systemic bias
 * WikiProject Countering systemic bias

Modifying GA/FAs
Most articles that are at GA or FA will already fulfill these criteria with a few modifications prior to translation. This section reiterates a few points mentioned earlier. Ask yourself:


 * Are there unnecessary templates?
 * Does the article have a world-wide coverage?

If all these apply you can send it through to the review process:
 * WikiProject Medicine/Translation task force/Review

Why good ledes?
The reason behind these criteria are twofold:
 * 1) Increase the visibility of the project for the English Wikipedia and to allow more English Wikipedians to get involved
 * 2) Show our quality standards to the communities we are translating for. For content to be accepted we need to show editors working in other languages that we have high standards for any content we translate.