Health portal/Step3a

From OLPC
Jump to: navigation, search

Translate this page with Google -español -български -中文(中国大陆)‎ -中文(台灣)‎ -hrvatski -čeština -dansk -Nederlands -suomi -français -Deutsch -Ελληνικά -हिन्दी -italiano -日本語 -한국어 -norsk -polski -português -română -русский -svenska

  This page is part of the OLPC Health Project. Hardware | Software | Content | Health Jam
XO Caudecus

Analysis of MedLinePlus structure

Following the download of the raw materials as shown in Health_portal/Step2. A thorough review was conducted of of the downloaded files to determine several features

  1. The internal HTML structure of a prototype health topic page
  2. The overall organizational structure of the materials as the are loaded and linked on the MedLinePlus site.

Anatomy of a MedLinePlus health topic page

put in a page breaking down a single example page

  • Header
  • Dublin Core metadata (try to figure out how to keep)
  • Main content (this is the meat)
  • Related content 9these are good internal links, keep)
  • Links section (most of these are too US-specific, delete)
  • Golocal section (this is entirely US-specific, delete)
  • footer section (delete, but will be adddind attribution section later)
  • Sometimes Languages section, this is worth preserving in some form, but how (keep link or harvest localized text from linked page).

Overall web-site structure

The main index page (Level1 index), lists five major groupings of topics. Below each of these is a collection of links to Level2 index pages:

  • Body Location/Systems
    • Blood, Heart and Circulation
    • Bones, Joints and Muscles
    • Brain and Nerves
    • Digestive System
    • Ear, Nose and Throat
    • Endocrine System
    • Eyes and Vision
    • Immune System
    • Kidneys and Urinary System
    • Lungs and Breathing
    • Mouth and Teeth
    • Skin, Hair and Nails
    • Female Reproductive System
    • Male Reproductive System
  • Disorders and Conditions
    • Cancers
    • Genetics/Birth Defects
    • Infections
    • Injuries and Wounds
    • Mental Health and Behavior
    • Metabolic Problems
    • Poisoning, Toxicology, Environmental Health
    • Pregnancy and Reproduction
    • Substance Abuse Problems
  • Diagnosis and Therapy
    • Complementary and Alternative Therapies
    • Diagnostic Tests
    • Drug Therapy
    • Surgery and Rehabilitation
    • Symptoms
    • Transplantation and Donation
  • Demographic Groups
    • Children and Teenagers
    • Men
    • Population Groups
    • Seniors
    • Women
  • Health and Wellness
    • Fitness and Exercise
    • Food and Nutrition
    • Health System
    • Personal Health Issues
    • Safety Issues
    • Sexual Health Issues
    • Social/Family Issues
    • Wellness and Lifestyle

From the Level2 index pages there are links to actual content pages (Level3 "leaves"). Any individual health topic (leaf) may be linked from multiple Level2 index pages.

There is an alternative master index page with a listing of all health topics in alphabetical order [1], however this may pose some issues when it comes to i18n and l10n.

Need to review images grabbed, keep navigation, lose ADAM pics. Replace some with CC images or lose altogether. Try running the scripts above with out the -p flag set and compare filesets, transfer over those page-element images that are still needed. Use names of images to be excluded to hunt them down in the HTML for editing out.

Need to trim some stuff in each downloaded health topic:

  • Tone down NIH branding while preserving attribution, lose or modify footer for instance. Keep some attribution, preserve a link back to NIH site for original or updated content. Possibly through a "leaving bundle to WWW" page.
  • Need to figure out what to do with links that are next hop. They go off to stuff that may have copyright or be too US specific. Can delete big chunks of bottom of each page. Provide opportunity for local MinHealth link insertion, "local branding" as well as locally relevant content.
  • Nice feature, to look at. I think in the current form it should allow easy back and forth between English and Spanish. This provides some opportunity to increase bilingual understanding of medical terms.
  • It might make sense to globally restructure for easier i18n/l10n. For instance, this currently uses separate folder for Spanish, that is fine, but try to i18n-ize the structure so that is one or more lang-xx folders.


Go to next section - Step 4

Return to Health portal main page