Category talk:Infectious diseases/Archive 1
Latest comment: 17 years ago by Davidruben in topic Cats and subcats
Cats and subcats
editHi. Just populated this category with the usual diseases. The individual diseases should probably be recategorized as bacterial, viral, fungal, parasitic or prion or whatever else as but I thought it's a start and it's now a usable category until someone else finds the time. Alex.tan 13:41, 30 Jun 2004 (UTC)
- I've moved as many bacterial-only diseases to the relevant subcategory. As of yet there was no Viral diseases subcategory, which I will now create (NB articles on a virus are categorised under Category:Viruses, the diseases so caused under this subcat of infectious diseases) David Ruben Talk 03:33, 31 January 2007 (UTC)
- Ok, some 200 edits later, there is now a consistant structure to this category and its subcategories and how articles are placed within them:
- NB the "Microbiological disciplines" might not always cover clinical topics and so the "-ologies" are both part of Microbiology category, which in turn is a subcategory of the Biology category, and are also the terms for the sub-division disciplines within the study and clinical fields of the Medicial Discpline of Infectious Disease (note without the final "s").
- I have therefore tried to ensure that articles on specific microorganisms are categorised under the relevenat microbiological "Organisms" category, whereas articles on the caused disease appear under the "Disease" category. Of course some articles describe both the causative orgainism and the resulting disease and so correctly should be listed under both categories. However unless an article is about the field of biology (its research or clinical practice) then it should not be under the "Microbiological/Clinical discipline" or "Diseases" categories. David Ruben Talk 02:29, 1 February 2007 (UTC)
Preventative measures
editI just noticed that most of the information on diseases and infections include explanations of History, Diagnosis, Pathophysiology, Epidemiology, and Treatment but are severely lacking in Prevention. This would be most helpful to most (unaffected) readers of the articles. 144.92.47.77 18:17, 18 October 2006 (UTC)