who practices in imputation and estimation

14
Health Statistics & Informatics 1 WHO practices in imputation and estimation Conference on Data Quality for International Organizations Rome, Italy, 7-8 July 2008-05-28 Carla AbouZahr Coordinator, Statistics, Monitoring and Analysis World Health Organization Geneva

Upload: inez

Post on 09-Jan-2016

34 views

Category:

Documents


2 download

DESCRIPTION

WHO practices in imputation and estimation. Conference on Data Quality for International Organizations Rome, Italy, 7-8 July 2008-05-28. Carla AbouZahr Coordinator, Statistics, Monitoring and Analysis World Health Organization Geneva. Types of health statistics. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: WHO practices  in imputation and estimation

Health Statistics & Informatics 1

WHO practices in imputation and estimation

Conference on Data Quality for International Organizations

Rome, Italy, 7-8 July 2008-05-28

Carla AbouZahrCoordinator, Statistics, Monitoring and Analysis

World Health OrganizationGeneva

Page 2: WHO practices  in imputation and estimation

Health Statistics & Informatics 2

Types of health statistics

• Unadjusted health statistics derived directly from primary data collection with no adjustments or corrections.

Page 3: WHO practices  in imputation and estimation

Health Statistics & Informatics 3

Page 4: WHO practices  in imputation and estimation

Health Statistics & Informatics 4

Types of health statistics

• Unadjusted health statistics derived directly from primary data collection with no adjustments or corrections.

• Adjusted health statistics corrected to deal with known biases, use of indirect techniques.

Page 5: WHO practices  in imputation and estimation

Health Statistics & Informatics 5

Page 6: WHO practices  in imputation and estimation

Health Statistics & Informatics 6

Types of health statistics

• Unadjusted health statistics derived directly from primary data collection with no adjustments or corrections.

• Adjusted health statistics corrected to deal with known biases, use of indirect techniques.

• Predicted health statistics based on a model relating the quantity of interest to covariates. – Forecasting: past relationships to predict future– Farcasting: missing primary data

Page 7: WHO practices  in imputation and estimation

Health Statistics & Informatics 7

Page 8: WHO practices  in imputation and estimation

Health Statistics & Informatics 8

Source:Gareth JonesWHO/UNICEF database

Page 9: WHO practices  in imputation and estimation

Health Statistics & Informatics 9

Source:Christopher MurrayInstitute for Health Metrics and Evaluation

Page 10: WHO practices  in imputation and estimation

Health Statistics & Informatics 10

Sources of data for global mortality estimates (circa 2004)

Complete VR Incomplete VR

Survey/census no data

Child mortality: q5 Adult mortality: 45q15

Source: WHO

Indirect methods problematic for adult mortality

Birth histories, Indirect methods;

Page 11: WHO practices  in imputation and estimation

Health Statistics & Informatics 11

Page 12: WHO practices  in imputation and estimation

Health Statistics & Informatics 12

WHO principles for imputation

• Standard four-step procedure for estimation – a high-quality accessible database; – an independent peer review group; – published methods of estimation; margins of uncertainty– internal WHO clearance by HSI

• Country consultation– iterative process between Member States, WHO

country and regional offices and headquarters– feedback on quality of data collection and reporting;

strengthening country capacity to reproduce, produce and use estimates.

Page 13: WHO practices  in imputation and estimation

Health Statistics & Informatics 13

External advisory bodies

• Disease-specific M&E reference groups– Include agencies and academic experts– Address coordination issues– Develop "best estimates": <5, maternal mortality,

coverage of interventions

• Advisory Committee on Health Monitoring and Statistics (ACHMS)– Independent outside experts – Gives inputs to WHO on its work, including Global

Burden of Disease, World Health Statistics.– Advises DG on scientific and technical issues.

Page 14: WHO practices  in imputation and estimation

Health Statistics & Informatics 14

Summary and conclusion

• WHO use of imputation:– Correction for definitional differences, application

of WHO standards, known biases– Production of regional aggregates– Generation of missing values for countries

• Recommendations for CCSA– General principles for imputation– Methods context and subject specific– Transparency and replicability– Country endorsement of methods not values