User:Graham Beards
I have been an editor and contributor since 8 April 2007, focusing mainly on health and biology-related articles. I have written eight articles that have appeared on the Main Page as Todays' Featured Article. I was a Featured Article Candidates' Delegate for four years from 2012 to 2016 and I promoted 502 articles to FA status. In real life, I am a National Health Service microbiologist. My research papers are listed on PubMed here: [1] "Rotavirus vaccination has saved hundreds of thousands of children’s lives from diarrhea" [2]
Featured Article Save Award
On behalf of the FAR coordinators, thank you, Graham Beards! Your work on Menstrual cycle has allowed the article to retain its featured status, recognizing it as one of the best articles on Wikipedia. This is a rare accomplishment and you should be proud. You may display this FA star upon your userpage. Keep up the great work! Cheers, Nikkimaria (talk) 03:58, 23 December 2021 (UTC)
If you contribute to Wikipedia, be prepared to be plagiarised
And not only by schoolchildren. This "publication" is copied from several of our articles including Social history of viruses, Introduction to viruses and Influenza.
The most unhelpful comment I have ever received from a FAC reviewer
Can I be the writing instructor that I am in real life and ask you to try harder?
Here's some excellent advice
Achieving excellence through featured content
An image created by you has been promoted to featured picture status Your image, File:Phage.jpg, was nominated on Wikipedia:Featured picture candidates, gained a consensus of support, and has been promoted. If you would like to nominate an image, please do so at Wikipedia:Featured picture candidates. Thank you for your contribution! Armbrust The Homunculus 14:36, 3 June 2016 (UTC)
|
- Demonstrating the wave-like behaviour of photons (in my kitchen)
- Neisseria gonorrhoeae in pus from a case of gonorrhoea in a man
- Neisseria gonorrhoeae and pus cells in a Gram-stained penile discharge
- Gram stained pus from a urethral discharge with intracellular Neisseria gonorrhoeae
- A typical case of aerobic vaginitis (Gram stain)
- Aerobic vaginitis; appearance by phase contrast microscopy
- Ring forms of Plasmodium falciparum in red blood cells
- A malarial parasite, probably Plasmodium vivax, in a red blood cell
- A Giemsa-stained blood film from a person with iron-deficiency anemia. This person also had hemoglobin Kenya.
- A Giemsa-stained blood film from a person with iron-deficiency anemia (lower magnification)
- Blood from a person with beta thalassemia
- Whole blood with microfilaria worm, Giemsa stain, from a person with Loa loa
- Electron micrograph of a herpesvirus
- Trichomonas vaginalis by phase-contrast microscopy
- Trichomonas vaginalis by phase-contrast microscopy
- Trichomonas vaginalis by phase-contrast microscopy single trophozoite
- Trichomonas vaginalis from a human vagina x 400
- Trichomonas vaginalis May-Grünwald-Giemsa staining. A barb-like axostyle (left) projects opposite the four-flagella bundle.
- Trichomonas May-Grünwald-Giemsa staining
- Pthirus pubis, crab louse or pubic louse (Pthirus pubis) is an insect that is an obligate ectoparasite of humans, feeding exclusively on blood.
- Crab louse
- Monocytes, a type of white blood cell involved in immunity
- Electron micrograph of adenovirus and adeno-associated virus
- Red blood cells in sickle cell anaemia
- Candida albicans Gram stain
- Candida albicans Gram stain
- Candida spores in a vaginal swab. (Gram stain)
- Spores and pseudohyphae of Candida albicans in a vaginal swab (Gram stain)
- Vaginal swab wet mount of Candida albicans (phase contrast)
- Gram-stained pus from a urethral discharge showing Gram-negative, intracellular diplococci
- The bacteria Neisseria gonorrhoeae in pus (Gram stain)
- Another case of gonorrhoea (Gram-stain)
- Giant platelets in a person with immune thrombocytopenia pupura. (Blood film Giemsa stain)
- Agar diffusion antibiotic sensitivity testing
- Antibiotic resistance tests: Bacteria are streaked on dishes with white disks, each impregnated with a different antibiotic.
- Electron micrograph of EDIM - the rotavirus that infects mice
- Orf virus
- Electron micrograph of three cowpox virus particles
- A plant rhabdovirus
- A computer reconstruction based on cryo-electron micrographs of a rotavirus particle (A) and a rotavirus particle reacted with a monoclonal antibody (B)
- Gram stain of lactobacilli and squamous epithelial cells in vaginal swab
- Gram stain showing normal flora and the bacteria seen in bacterial vaginosis
- Gram-stain of Gram-positive streptococci surrounded by pus cells from and infected cut on a finger
- Phase contrast microscopy of clue cells in a vaginal swab
- Trypanosoma cruzi in blood Giemsa stain
- Coronaviruses
- A Kleihauer–Betke test used to measure the amount of fetal hemoglobin transferred from a fetus to a mother's bloodstream.
- Caesium chloride (CsCl) solution and two morphological types of rotavirus. Following centrifugation at 100g a density gradient forms in the CsCl solution and the virus particles separate according to their densities. The tube is 10cm tall. The viruses are the two "milky" zones close together.
- Neutrophils, a type of white blood cell
- Cryptococcus neoformans a pathogenic yeast
- Horse torovirus
- A culture of salmonella bacteria
- Torovirus in human faeces
- Electron micrograph of molluscum contagiosum virus
- Scanning electron micrograph of Actinomyces israelii (false colour)
- Electron micrograph of Parvovirus B19
- Haemophilus influenzae requires X and V factors for growth. In this culture, Haemophilus has only grown around the paper disc that has been impregnated with X and V factors. No bacterial growth is seen around the discs that only contain either X or V factor.
- The cytophathic effect of Varicella zoster virus on cells in cultures
- Red blood cells as seen by darkfield microscopy x 1000
- Blood coagulation pathways in vivo showing the central role played by thrombin
- Ward were the last case of smallpox was seen in Birmingham, UK
- Ward were the last case of smallpox was seen in Birmingham, UK
- Mpox lesions on a penis
- The tongue of a child showing the signs of scarlet fever caused by Lancefield group A streptococci
- Neisseria gonorrhoeae bacteria in a pus cell
- Platelets in human blood
- Gram stain of a vaginal swab showing gonococci (in pairs - arrow) inside polymorphonuclear granulocytes
The Half Million Award | |
For your contributions to bring Menstrual cycle (estimated annual readership: 718,200) to Featured Article status, I hereby present you the Half Million Award. Congratulations on this rare accomplishment, and thanks for all you do for Wikipedia's readers! SandyGeorgia (Talk) 01:41, 24 April 2021 (UTC) |
The Million Award | ||
For your contributions to bring Virus (estimated annual readership: 1,453,000) to Featured Article status, I hereby present you the Million Award. Congratulations on this rare accomplishment, and thanks for all you do for Wikipedia's readers. -- Khazar2 (talk) 12:56, 29 August 2013 (UTC) |
This picture is a transmission electron micrograph at approximately 200,000× magnification, showing numerous bacteriophages attached to the exterior of a bacterium's cell wall.Photograph credit: Graham Beards
This Wikipedian remembers Brian Boulton. |
This editor won the Million Award for bringing Virus to Featured Article status. |
This user is a member of Wikiproject Viruses. |
This user is British. |
.