Quality Standards

Introduction[edit | edit source]

Physiopedia aims to be a clinical reference for student and qualified physiotherapists. The Physiopedia quality standards have been developed on this basis and focus on providing confidence that content meets that quality standards expected of a professional resource.

These quality standards are best practices for content creation, layout and formatting of Physiopedia pages. Editors should attempt to follow these guidelines, though they are best treated with common sense, and occasional exceptions may apply.

Content Guidelines[edit | edit source]

Content on Physiopedia pages should comply with these guidelines:

  1. Articles are summaries of a topic and should be written in a clear and concise manner that is accessible, comprehensible and can easily be applied to physiotherapy practice. For large topics consider splitting the topic into several linked shorter pages.
  2. Relevance to the physiotherapy profession should always be included.
  3. All content should be written in the English language.
  4. All content should be up to date, evidence based and include references where appropriate (see Referencing Guide).  
  5. Internationally agreed professional scope of practice should be respected at all time.
  6. Copyright policy (Terms and Conditions Section 9) should be followed at all times.
  7. Always respect the Physiopedia Community Culture.

Page Layout Recommendations[edit | edit source]

The general layout for the page should include editor credits at the top of the page, followed by the main content for the page, resources and references, as shown below:

<div class="editorbox">Original Editor- [[User:Username|Username]] Top Contributors - The top 5 contributors are automatically added with the following wikitext <nowiki>{{Special:Contributors/{{FULLPAGENAME}}}}</div>

Note: The original editor is the first person to contribute significant content to the page. This person can be identified by looking at the History tab. They are credited with a link to their profile page by adding this source code

Heading[edit | edit source]

The page content should be divided up by appropriate sub-headings as demonstrated on this page and in the source code below. To format the headings click on the 'Paragraph' link in the editing toolbar. Please try not to use more than 3 sub-headings. See formatting help

Sub-heading 1[edit | edit source]

Bulleted lists should be added by clicking on the 'lists' icon in the editing toolbar or can be added directly to the source code. See formatting help:

  • xxx
  • xx
  • x

Sub-heading 2[edit | edit source]

Numbered lists should be added by clicking on the 'lists' icon in the editing toolbar or can be added directly to the source code. See formatting help:

  1. xxx
  2. xx
  3. x

Resources[edit | edit source]

Resources are useful links that will provide good quality further reading and information such as clinical guidelines, evidence based toolkits etc. Add them as a bulleted list in this section.

References[edit | edit source]

References should be added in Vancouver style by clicking on the 'chain link' icon in the editing toolbar. See the Adding References tutorial</nowiki>