Posts

Showing posts with the label demographics

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

Image
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...

See How Canadians Have Aged Since 1971 from Visual Demographics Dashboards

Image
My latest Tableau project involves Canadian population demographics. Statistics Canada has estimates publicly available with many age groups, both traditional genders, and all the provinces and territories, for each year from 1971 to 2016. It's a lot of data which is not only cumbersome to manage and use, but hard to visualize without a lot of work. Well, Tableau enabled me to change that so here are some of the initial offerings. I will write more as I create more interfaces with different ways to organize and/or access the data. First up is your common scatterplot by single age years. The default view is for all of Canada, both genders. You can see the bump that is the baby boom now in their mid-50s to late 60s, hitting 70. That break in the smooth curve at 70 was 1946, after all the soldiers returned home and people started having babies again. The war ended in late 1945 so give 9 months for birth and you got the boom in 1946 that is a massive jump from 1945. If you...