Difference between revisions of "FEM-WIKI"

From
Jump to: navigation, search
m
m
Line 22: Line 22:
 
=References=
 
=References=
 
<References/>
 
<References/>
 
 
 
---------------
 
 
= Welcome to [Your Wiki Name] =
 
<!-- Introduction text -->
 
 
= Latest Page =
 
{{#latest_page:}}
 
 
 
= Featured Articles =
 
<!-- List of featured articles -->
 
 
= News and Events =
 
<!-- List of news and events -->
 
 
= Help and Support =
 
<!-- Links to help and support pages -->
 

Revision as of 21:29, 9 April 2023

Field Epidemiology Manual

The Field Epidemiology Manual was originally developed in 2007 by the ECDC and the City eHealth Research Centre (CeRC - City University, London) [1], [2] to support the European Programme for Intervention Epidemiology Training (EPIET). Trainers, supervisors, scientific coordinators, and facilitators created draft chapters using the lectures they delivered during the EPIET introductory course. The philosophy of sharing and building knowledge (in particular training materials) led to the creation of a collaborative information space for the epidemiological training community - The FEM Wiki.

Eventually, the ECDC decommissioned the FEM Wiki in 2022 and archived the last version as a PDF. Since FEM Wiki content was developed under Creative Commons, the Dutch Public Health Learning Support Company Transmissible decided to reinstall the Field Epidemiology manual as it was intended: a professional collaborative platform.

The FEMWiki aims to create a library of training materials for field epidemiologists.

FEM Wiki is an open information-sharing platform for all professionals and the lay public interested in public health. It is hosted and funded by ECDC. The content of FEM Wiki is provided by platform users and does not necessarily represent the official opinion of Transmissible BV. By contributing content to FEMWIKI, users agree to the conditions described under Creative Commons and FEM Wiki users’ code of conduct.

Though this platform does not allow as many community activities besides maintaining the Field Epidemiology Manual, we have created an open marketplace where users can discuss and exchange views: click on the 'Discussion' tab above.

Article Portal

The FEMWIKI is organised into five main chapters. Below is a portal with links to each chapter's main articles.


References

  1. KOSTKOVA, Patty; SZOMSZOR, Martin. The FEM Wiki Project: A Conversion of a Training Resource for Field Epidemiologists into a Collaborative Web 2.0 Portal. In: Electronic Healthcare: Third International Conference, eHealth 2010, Casablanca, Morocco, December 13-15, 2010, Revised Selected Papers 3. Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2012. p. 119-126.
  2. KOSTKOVA, Patty; PRIKAZSKY, Vladimir; BOSMAN, Arnold. FEMwiki: Crowdsourcing Semantic Taxonomy and Wiki Input Todomain Experts While Keeping Editorial Control: Mission Possible!. In: Proceedings of the 5th International Conference on Digital Health 2015. 2015. p. 27-34.

Contributors