This is a list of medical wikis, collaboratively-editable websites that focus on medical information. Many of the most popular medical wikis take the form of encyclopedias, with a separate article for each medical term. Some of these websites, such as WikiDoc and Radiopaedia, are editable by anyone, while others, such as Ganfyd, restrict editing access to professionals. The majority of them have content available only in English.
The Flexikon in a German wiki-based medical encyclopedia. It is provided by DocCheck, a service provider for physicians and other healthcare suppliers in Germany.
Articles in the Flexikon are free to read, but creating or editing content requires registration and the proof of being a medical professional. As of 2024, the Flexikon had more than 80,000 articles and more than 6,000 authors.
Text is CC BY-SA 4.0; images include CC-by-NC images.
A fork of medical articles on Wikipedia. Users can log-in with Wikipedia credentials. Editing content requires registration and requires manual approval by administrators.[3]
May 2020: Had 13,958 articles with 36,840 cases[5]
Content license
CC BY NC SA 3.0
Radiopaedia is a wiki-based international collaborative radiology educational resource with reference articles, radiology images, and patient cases.[6] It is aimed at registrars, residents and consultant radiology staff.[7] An iPhone/iPad application was released in 2009.
Users of the site are free to add and edit content as well as to maintain their own case library. In an attempt to reduce vandalism and peer-review content, an editorial team moderates changes to ensure that the presented material is as accurate and relevant as possible.[8]
WikiAnesthesia is a collaboratively-developed anesthesia knowledge base whose educational mission is to provide the global anesthesia community with a free, open-access, crowd-sourced repository of anesthesia knowledge.[9] Content is provided by anesthesia providers and covers a wide range of topics in the field of anesthesiology.
WikiDoc (alternatively spelled Wiki Doc) is a medical wiki encyclopedia[10] where contributors are not required to have credentials in a biomedical field. WikiDoc was started in December 2005 by C. Michael Gibson, of Harvard Medical School.[11][12] The original content came from Gibson's chief residency notes, board review notes, and content from a variety of copyleft sources including The U.S. National Library of Medicine, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control, Wikipedia, and Ask Dr Wiki.[13] WikiDoc differs from Wikipedia in the following ways:[14] it is oriented more to medical professionals,[15] and has medical news, a toolbar to search internet on the right hand side to gather articles, guidelines and slides, a toolbar on the left to see what page most people looked at next, and a board review course (in Beta testing).
WikEM is a wiki-based website and mobile application oriented towards emergency medicine clinicians.[16] It started as a database created from notes and checklists of residents at the Harbor-UCLA emergency medicine residency program, but is now open to all clinical providers.[17][18] WikEM was launched in 2009.[17] Its mobile application is available for iOS and Android, and functions in an offline environment. It calls itself The Global Emergency Medicine Wiki.
WikiLectures is a collaborative project focused on creating and storing medical study materials. It is developed by students and teachers from various Czech and Slovak medical faculties. WikiLectures is part of the project MEFANET, a network linking medical schools in the Czech Republic and Slovakia.[19]
Editors of WikiLectures take care of promoting the authors, editorial process contributions, technical support, WikiLectures structure and ensure the safety of the project. WikiLectures contain articles, notes, prepared exam topics, guides for practitioners, and study books. WikiLectures are constantly growing.[20] The articles are written by medical students, faculty professionals and doctors. The administration and security is provided by the editorial board. Articles in WikiLectures are regularly checked by editors and experts in various branches of medicine. Articles checked by teachers are always marked by a special sign.
WikiMSK is dedicated to musculoskeletal medicine, and is based in New Zealand. It is affiliated with the New Zealand College of Musculoskeletal Medicine (NZCMM), and is physician directed. It is designed around a peer review process and currently only members of the NZCMM are able to create and edit articles. The majority of the content is open access to unregistered users.
Wikimedica is a general evidence based medical wiki.[22] Based in Canada, it aims at providing French language health professionals with an open access and dynamic knowledge base to allow for better and more accurate patient care. The wiki is open to all for reading but can only be edited by professionals.
HemOnc.org is a hematology/oncology wiki which was originally created by oncologists to provide information about chemotherapy regimens and hematology/oncology medications. Its contributors are practicing physicians and other medical professionals. Its current focus is to provide clinicians referenced information about chemotherapy regimens, medications used in hematology/oncology, and to allow medical professionals to share any useful references or medical information with each other to improve their clinical & academic practice.
HemOnc.org runs on MediaWiki software. Anyone may sign up for an account and suggest additional information to be added. Editing privileges are activated for account holders whose credentials are verified. The content is not under an open license.
Data about HemOnc.org has been presented at the 2013 ASCO Quality Care Symposium,[25] and it has been profiled in the oncology press.[26][27] The website's chemotherapy regimen database has also been used for academic research projects.[28]
WikiSM is an open access sports medicine wiki. They welcome all sports medicine physicians and other members of the sports medicine team (including allied health) to register and become contributors.
AskDrWiki was a medical wiki encyclopedia created by Cleveland Clinic Cardiology Fellows Kenny Civello and Brian Jefferson. The project was started as a response to the lack of free online medical information found in several community hospitals and was created to form a repository of cardiovascular information that could be readily accessed for reference. It was launched in August 2006. The site now holds medical review articles, clinical notes, pearls, and medical images. The wiki allows anyone with a medical background to contribute or edit medical articles, of which there are over 2,000 as of 2013[update].
The purpose of the site was to provide reliable and easily accessed health information for the medical community including physicians, nurses, and medical students. The information published on the site is not meant to supersede medical training but to serve as a repository of medical review articles to give medical professionals an online source where they can review medical topics. The website is similar to Wikipedia because it runs on MediaWiki software allowing users to add and edit articles, but differs in that all users must be credentialed based on their medical training before they are allowed to publish. Its goal is not to compete with Wikipedia regarding consumer health-related topics, but to serve as an expert medical wiki and provide a source of up-to-date medical information for healthcare providers.
As of February 2015, although still online, the wiki had minimal ongoing contributions, with only 3 edits in 2014.[35] As of March 2022 the site was down.
Ganfyd was a medicalwiki community and encyclopedia,[10] created in November 2005 by a group of doctors working in the United Kingdom. Only registered medical practitioners or persons working under their direction, and a small number of invited non-medical specialists, could edit Ganfyd articles. The intention was to make the material reliable enough for professional medical use. As of 2013[update] it has over 8000 content pages. As of May 2020 it is no longer active.[36]
Medcyclopaedia
Medcyclopaedia, [37] The Encyclopaedia of Medical Imaging,[38] was a wiki encyclopedia of medical imaging used in radiology and radiography.[39] As of December 2012, the site no longer exists.
The encyclopedia was the result of a collaboration of the Nycomed Amersham Intercontinental Continuing Education in Radiology Institute (NICER Institute), Sweden, Department of Radiology, Lund University, Sweden, and Amersham Health, Oslo, Norway. It was provided and copyrighted by the healthcare unit of General Electric corporation. Retrieval of images (other than thumbnails) required registration.
The website contained 3,600 pages before closing down.
Anyone with medical knowledge was welcome to become part of Medpedia's community. However, to qualify to edit or contribute to the main content, approved editors needed an M.D., D.O., or Ph.D. in a biomedical field. Others could contribute by writing in suggestions for changes to the site using the "Make a suggestion" link at the top of each page. An approved editor could review and potentially add submitted suggestions.[43]
Medpedia was composed of three primary components:
A collaborative encyclopedia (also referred to as the "knowledge base")
A Network & Directory for health professionals and organizations
Communities of Interest where medical professionals and non-professionals come together to discuss topics of interest.
A 2012 literature review of 50 academic journal articles about the use of social media by clinicians[44] remarked that Medpedia had "launched in 2009 with substantial institutional backing" but that the authors "did not find articles reporting success metrics" for it.
Around January 2013 the site abruptly closed. Medpedia's founder James Currier acknowledged that this was permanent in a blog post in July 2013.[45]
WikiSurgery is a collaboratively-built online encyclopedia hosted by the International Journal of Surgery. As of November 2013, the site's homepage is still up but none of the rest of the website is viewable.
^"WikEM". www.wikem.org. OpenEM Foundation. April 29, 2014. Retrieved June 23, 2014.
^ abCastro, Harvey (April 2010). "Wikipedia and the iPhone". Emergency Medicine News. 32 (4). Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, Inc. Retrieved June 23, 2014.
^The Encyclopaedia of Medical Imaging. 8 vols, Lund, Sweden: NICER Institute/ISIS Medical Media, 2001. ISBN82-91942-00-5. Hardcover
^"The Encyclopaedia of Medical Imaging. 8 vols[book review]". Radiology. 227 (2). Radiological Society of North America (RSNA): 500. 2003. doi:10.1148/radiol.2272032510. ISSN0033-8419.
^von Muhlen, M., & Ohno-Machado, L. (2012). Reviewing social media use by clinicians. Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association, 19(5), 777–81. doi:10.1136/amiajnl-2012-000990