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My last edit - questions to katewishing
editI am a novice in Wikipedia and would like your help in understanding teh nature of editing. You reverted today all my edits .
I believe that I added a lot of useful and refined information to these article and I am sorry that they were deleted.
Few specific questions:
[1] I added a reference to a FDA cleared targeted Phototherapy device - Multiclear.
You deleted it. On the other hand you did leave in the article reference to 2 other devices: B Clear and Theralight. What is the difference ? I personally do not see why mentioning these 2 and not the third.
[2] Blue light acne therapy is today in the mainstream of acne therapy. The FDA cleared this treatment formally for this indication. The are dozens of review articles and dozens of clinical studies in teh best peer review journal that accept it;s efficacy as one of the acne treatment. It is extremely useful for people who can not take drugs. Hard to understand why all these references were deleted.
[3] Photosensitivity to drugs is a big problem. In my edit I tried to highlight the problem in people under psyciatric treatment that are exposed to this possible side effects. Why was it deleted ?
What is promotional here ?
Best wishes, Skin58 — Preceding unsigned comment added by Skin58 (talk • contribs) 18:36, 16 September 2015 (UTC)
- You removed a 2012 review that states "
there is insufficient evidence to recommend the routine use of [light] therapies for the treatment of acne. Studies of these products typically lack controls, have small sample sizes, are short term, and do not compare these therapies with validated pharmacologic treatments.
" Most of the sources you replaced that with are dated or primary. Only two of the sources you added meet WP:MEDRS guidelines. The first is a 2011 book, and it is consistent with our statement that further research is needed, not that the efficacy has already been proved:"The studies to date are promising; however, further investigation is necessary to determine safety, long-term efficacy, and optimal parameters of lasers and light sources."
[1]
- Your second acceptable source is a 2012 review. This one does say that "
Blue light therapy is a clinically accepted approach for Propionibacterium acnes infections."
However, it contradicts multiple other reviews that state the evidence is limited, and the lead authors have published numerous studies on blue light therapy, which puts their objectivity in question. - The entire "FDA approved devices" section should probably be removed per WP:NOTCATALOG. KateWishing (talk) 19:39, 16 September 2015 (UTC)
Should not include Photodynamic therapy
editWhy is Photodynamic therapy included here under techniques - PDT is light activation of photosensitive drugs. Maybe 'light therapy' is too general a term and should be a disambiguation page ? - Rod57 (talk) 03:12, 2 December 2015 (UTC)
Diabetic retinopathy
editLight therapy is being used to treat Diabetic Retinopathy and is available commercially (Noctura 400 mask - www.noctura.com). There is significant evidence that retinal stimulation will treat this condition in humans from a number of unbiased relatable sources such as
Eye (Lond). 2011 Dec;25(12):1546-54. doi: 10.1038/eye.2011.264. Epub 2011 Oct 21
and there are clinical trials underway
Trials. 2014 Nov 22;15:458. doi: 10.1186/1745-6215-15-458.
How do we add this or similar references (there are quite a few available) to show that there is a body of evidence that light therapy can be used for this treatment?
Also I'm keen to add something on other forms of light therapy. I've been carrying out extensive research (part of my job) in this area and want to get the message out.
Northernalex (talk) 14:14, 20 October 2016 (UTC) northernalex
- Unfortunately, it looks like your entry above was ignored, Northernalex. But by way of belated response: clinical trials are not usually considered sufficiently reliable for inclusion on Wikipedia— we have a strong preference for secondary sources, which have reviewed the results of one or more clinical trials, and there are editors who will insist on such sources, even if there are plenty of primary ones which demonstrate the same point. However, if you are able to provide some legitimate published sources that demonstrate this fact, by all means feel free to include them. Your expertise in this field is the kind of thing which Wikipedia takes for granted far too often! If you have any questions, leave me a message on my talk page. A loose necktie (talk) 08:36, 19 March 2020 (UTC)
Sources in intro
editMy understanding is that an appropriate article introduction rarely needs citations in it - the intro is a summary, and specific claims/contentions/facts are cited within the body. Krb19 added a raft of citations to the intro, and I'm wondering if they could be moved into the body instead. I know way too little about the topic to do so myself though. Anastrophe (talk) 22:01, 21 February 2020 (UTC)
I had added the citations in response to a [medical citation needed] tag that was placed in the intro. I've now moved some to the relevant sections of the body and removed a second reference to one citation. I agree that intro sections don't usually need citations, but for medical information that is in any way contested I think they are appropriate. I suspect someone had particular concern about the use of light therapy in non-seasonal psychiatric conditions, which is not long established. Krb19 (talk) 23:22, 21 February 2020 (UTC)
- Thank you kindly for the explanation, and the fix. Anastrophe (talk) 23:48, 21 February 2020 (UTC)
Citation 82 page not found
edittitle says it all 80.242.44.207 (talk) 10:01, 17 May 2023 (UTC)
Title
editI suggest renaming Light therapy into Phototherapy or Bright light therapy and creating a disambiguation page for Light therapy that would list:
- Phototherapy (aka Bright light therapy)
- Low-level laser therapy (aka red light therapy)
- Ultraviolet light therapy
- PUVA therapy
- Photodynamic therapy
- Photothermal therapy
- Goeckerman therapy
- Chromotherapy (aka "Colored light therapy")
- Blood irradiation therapy
- Crib A'Glow
- UV-B lamps
- Bili light
- GreenLight Laser Therapy