Title: Presenting information communicating meaning
1Presenting informationcommunicating meaning
Health Management Information Systems
João Carlos de Timóteo Mavimbe Oslo, April 2007
2Presenting information
- LEARNING OUTCOMES
- By the end of the session you should be able
to - Understand the purposes and basic principles of
data presentation - Present data in simple tables
- Select appropriate graph types to present the
various types of data - Build appropriate graphs for display of data
- Develop skills in proper presentation of
information
3The information cycle Presenting Information
Tables, Graphs, Population, Maps
Presenting Interpreting
ANALYSIS Processing
USE
Collection
Input Raw data
4Preparing for Presentationessential
ingredients 3 C 1 T
Timely
- Correct
- good quality data
- Complete
- submission by all (most) reporting
facilities - Consistent
- data within normal ranges
- reflects community shifts
- clear definitions
5Presenting information
- What information is presented?
- Why is information presented?
- How is information presented?
6What information is presented?
- Analysed data (mainly)
- Collated data (sometimes)
- Raw data (rarely)Â
7Why is information presented?
- To promote understanding and facilitate
interpretation - Appropriate interpretations
- what linkages are possible? (correct, logical,
sensible) - may answer important questions
- may result in action
- Â
- Â Possible interpretations
- are context dependent (population, health,
service status) - depend on data quality
- should depart from data definitions
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8Why is information presented?
To share knowledge? with whom? To provide
feedback? to whom?
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9How is information presented?
- Three ways of presenting data
- Tabular frequency distribution table
- Graphs Histogram, Line diagrams, Scatter plot,
Bar chart, Pie chart - Numerical
- ? Measures of Typicality or Center mode, median,
mean - ? Measures of Variability (or Spread) range,
variance, SD - ? Measures of Shape skewness, kurtosis
- ? Proportions, rates, ratios
10Types of data
They determine the most appropriate tool for
presenting data.
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12Numerical Data
- Continuous they are measurable
- Examples
- Age of patients in years or months
- Weight of newborn in grams
- Discrete they are counted (possible values are
distinct or separate) - Examples
- The size of a family expressed as the number of
children - The number of days since the begining of a disease
units of measurement
13Non-numerical Data
- They are the qualitative description of
categories of a characteristic. - Examples
- The gender of a patient is recorded as male or
female - The list of diagnoses in a health center
14ExerciseMark with ? in the blank spaces
Â
15BEDS
an example of how a single data element may
provide different types of data.
- Number of beds
- Type of bed
- Height of the bed(from mattress to floor)
16Tables saying it with figures
Table No.
Source Comments Date___/___/___
17Tables
- Beware information overload
- easy to produce difficult to use
- Ideally should contain
- Few rows
- One category
- Uses
- assess quality
- trends over time
- make comparisons
- pick up outliers, gaps
18Tables
Table 1 Number of children per family in Maputo,
2005
Source Statistics Planning Directorate, 2005
19GRAPHS talking with pictures (a visual
representation of data)
- Advantages
- Information is instantly conveyed
- Data are presented clearly and simply
- Can expose relationships and patterns
- Detect trends over time
- Can be used to emphasise information
20Graph Elements
Title descriptive clinic name, what is graphed
and the time period Y axis must ALWAYS be
labeled Y axis label X axis label if
appropriate Key or legend used if more than
one element graphed
Y
X
Source Notes
Scale be appropriate
21Golden rules for graphs
- Never put too much information in the graph. KEEP
IT SIMPLE. - Never mix different activities stick to one
group of people or diseases or services. - Label your graph always have a clear heading,
easily read labels on the axes, and a legend
which explains each of the lines or bars. - Select scales that fit the entire graph on both
axes. - Where possible, draw a target line or reference
point to show where you are aiming at.
22Types of graphs
- They follow the types of data available
23Type of graphs
- Continuous data
- histograms
- line Graphs
- scatter Graphs
- Discrete Data
- bar graphs
- pie charts
24Graphs for sets of continuous data
- histograms
- line graphs
- cumulative line graphs
25Line graph
Graph 2 PHC headcount under 5 years old, Manyara
Clinic, 2001
- accurate, can show minute changes in the
relationships between 2 major variables - displays trends over time
- can be useful if more than one data item is used
26Bar graph versus Line graph
which one is best?
27Line graph, with 2 dependent variables
The larger the font, less detail will be shown in
the axes
Remember to remove the silly gray background to
improve contrast!
28Line graph, for cumulative coverage
29Line graph, for cumulative coverage
- Simple and effective monitoring tool
- Used when targets are set for a year i.e.
immunization, antenatal coverage, etc. - Each month, data is graphed individually and
also added to the previous month - A target is set, a target line is drawn and
progress is monitored with respect to the
target line
30Graphs for sets of discrete data
31Bar graph, simple
- displays data over time or can compare 2 or more
different facilities / districts / regions / years
32Bar graph, stacked
- has the advantages of a circle graph it
displays the quantities, but it also shows the
relative proportions of the categories to each
other and to the whole.
33Pie chart or circle graph
- best type of graph for showing the relative
proportions of different categories to each other
and to the whole - can be used when exact quantities are less
important than the relative sizes of the parts
34Common faults with graphs
- No title
- No labels for the variables
- No units of measurement (or incorrect units!)
- No scale markings (or just too many!)
- Inappropriate scale choice data points should
be evenly represented - Incorrect choice of independent (x-axis) and
dependent (y-axis) variables - No legends when needed
35Graphs- population pyramids
- they may highlight the differences in age
distribution between males and females as well as
proportional age categories
36The Facility Map
37GRAPHS YOU SHOULD NOT BUILD!
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39gone fishing
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