Talk:University of Cincinnati Health

Capitalization

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Someone had the practice of capitalizing nouns like "heart-lung machine", which are just common nouns and not proper nouns. Hence, they do not get capitalized (except in special circumstances, such as in the titles of books), and capitalizing them just made the writers look foolish and uneducated.
98.67.108.12 (talk) 19:49, 26 August 2012 (UTC)Reply

Abbreviations

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You need to be careful about your abbreviations because in general, "UC" means the University of California.
This extends to UCLA, UCSB, UCSC, UCSD, and UCSF.
Furthermore, "UC" can mean the University of Colorado or the University of Connecticut. Sorry to demean you, but in people's mind's, big universities with multiple campuses like the University of California and the University of Colorado (Boulder, Denver, and Colorado Springs) are more important and they come to mind first.
Abbreviations and acronyms need to be used with great care. It is true that U.S.A. = University of South Alabama, but who thinks of this over the United States of America?
98.67.108.12 (talk) 20:17, 26 August 2012 (UTC)Reply

Split out college articles and rename to UCHealth(Ohio)

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I've tried to find information about University of Cincinnati's Academic Health Center, but there is very little reference to it on UC's website. There I did find one web page that used the term, but looks like that site has not been updated in a while. All of the health related information on uc.edu either goes to the UCHealth website or to the website for the colleges mentioned in the article. I think this article should be split up. The four colleges mentioned in this article should be have their own standalone articles, and this page should be rename and rewritten for UCHealth. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Janus657 (talkcontribs) 17:36, 5 April 2020 (UTC)Reply