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Showing posts with the label dashboards

Canada's Most Comprehensive Public Health Report Card (2015-16 Combined CCHS)

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Results for the combined years 2015-16 Canadian Community Health Survey (CCHS) were released in early November, 2017... all of about 680,000 lines of it! It combined results from the individual years of 2015 and 2016 to allow for a larger sample so one could get statistically reliable results for geographies smaller than the provincial level. This was what is really useful and practical about it, for knowing where to focus to address public health issues that it can help with, since the problem is probably not an even distribution throughout a province. The following set of interactive, report card style dashboards on Tableau bring out the most telling information from the survey, which is comparisons to the national and provincial averages in each year. You can embed these dashboards into websites allowing for JavaScript below, like I did below, by clicking on the Share icon (third right in from bottom right), or send as a link. The embedding actually carries the variable values at ...

Canada's Most Up to Date Public Health Report Card (CCHS 2016, 2015)

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Results for the Canadian Community Health Survey, 2016 edition, was released in late September, 2017. I finally got around to putting it into a set of interactive Tableau report card dashboards to bring out the most telling information from the survey, which is comparisons to the national average in each year, and comparisons to 2015 results for the 2016 results. You can embed these dashboards into websites allowing for JavaScript below, like I did below, by clicking on the Share icon (third right in from bottom right), or send as a link. The embedding actually carries the variable values at whatever is set on the view you have when you grab the JavaScript, so you can leave the desired view on your blog and talk about it, rather than make the reader change the parameters so they can see what you were seeing when you wrote about it! Lovely feature! In these report cards, immediate visual results are shown as dots. Green dots mean (statistically) significantly better* results than th...