The result was merge to Google Glass. North America 1000 02:52, 9 June 2019 (UTC)
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The subject of this article, an event from 2014, fails to meet notability criteria for events ( Wikipedia:Notability (events)). The event had a bit of news coverage in 2014 and no further coverage, or evidence of impact, since then. The subject is covered with a section in the Google Glass article; a separate article is unnecessary.
If we look at this article as being about a type of health intervention rather than being about a news event, I'm afraid it's even worse. This article promotes the POV that Google Glass is an effective tool for helping women breastfeed, based on a tiny trial (6 patients!), and the results were apparently not published in a peer-reviewed medical journal. Our normal standard for sourcing of health-related claims is that we do not include claims that are based on the results of single clinical trials, even if they are peer reviewed. This article clutters up Category: Breastfeeding with highly commercial, trivial, poor-quality information. Our readers who are interested in breastfeeding deserve much better than this. Clayoquot ( talk | contribs) 07:24, 26 May 2019 (UTC)
This article was previously nominated for deletion under a previous title. See Wikipedia:Articles_for_deletion/Google_Glass_Breastfeeding_app_trial
The result was merge to Google Glass. North America 1000 02:52, 9 June 2019 (UTC)
[Hide this box] New to Articles for deletion (AfD)? Read these primers!
The subject of this article, an event from 2014, fails to meet notability criteria for events ( Wikipedia:Notability (events)). The event had a bit of news coverage in 2014 and no further coverage, or evidence of impact, since then. The subject is covered with a section in the Google Glass article; a separate article is unnecessary.
If we look at this article as being about a type of health intervention rather than being about a news event, I'm afraid it's even worse. This article promotes the POV that Google Glass is an effective tool for helping women breastfeed, based on a tiny trial (6 patients!), and the results were apparently not published in a peer-reviewed medical journal. Our normal standard for sourcing of health-related claims is that we do not include claims that are based on the results of single clinical trials, even if they are peer reviewed. This article clutters up Category: Breastfeeding with highly commercial, trivial, poor-quality information. Our readers who are interested in breastfeeding deserve much better than this. Clayoquot ( talk | contribs) 07:24, 26 May 2019 (UTC)
This article was previously nominated for deletion under a previous title. See Wikipedia:Articles_for_deletion/Google_Glass_Breastfeeding_app_trial