data, data , data: what to make of it and how to use it

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DATA, DATA , DATA: What to Make of It And How To Use It Florida Consortium for HIV/AIDS Research The AIDS Institute DRAFT

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DRAFT. DATA, DATA , DATA: What to Make of It And How To Use It. Florida Consortium for HIV/AIDS Research The AIDS Institute. Numbers, Rates, Proportions, Ratios…. Interpreting public health data is a lot like those hated word problems from middle school math. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: DATA, DATA , DATA: What to Make of It        And How To Use It

DATA, DATA , DATA:What to Make of It

And How To Use It

Florida Consortium for HIV/AIDS Research

The AIDS Institute

DRAFT

Page 2: DATA, DATA , DATA: What to Make of It        And How To Use It

Numbers, Rates, Proportions, Ratios….

• Interpreting public health data is a lot like those hated word problems from middle school math.

• A big part of doing this well is being precise in the words we use when working with numbers.

Page 3: DATA, DATA , DATA: What to Make of It        And How To Use It

Precise Words

• Here is a mathematical expression:

• 100 / 20 = 5

• How do you say this in words?

• “20 goes into 100 5 times”

• “20 divided into 100 is 5”

• “100 divided into 20 is 5”

• “100 divided by 20 is 5”

Page 4: DATA, DATA , DATA: What to Make of It        And How To Use It

A Typical Public Health TableTall Short Total

Young 100 40 140

Old 200 30 230

Total 300 70 370

Page 5: DATA, DATA , DATA: What to Make of It        And How To Use It

What can we say about these data?

• What percentage of subjects in this table are old?

• What percentage of subjects are short?

• What percentage of short subjects are old?

• What percentage of old subjects are short?

• What percentage of young subjects are short?

Page 6: DATA, DATA , DATA: What to Make of It        And How To Use It

Let’s Examine One of These

• What percentage of old subjects are short?

• 30/230 * 100 = 13.04%

Page 7: DATA, DATA , DATA: What to Make of It        And How To Use It

A Typical Public Health TableTall Short Total

Young 100 40 140

Old 200 30 230

Total 300 70 370

Page 8: DATA, DATA , DATA: What to Make of It        And How To Use It

Another One

• What percentage of short subjects are old?

• 30/70 * 100 = 42.86%

Page 9: DATA, DATA , DATA: What to Make of It        And How To Use It

A Typical Public Health TableTall Short Total

Young 100 40 140

Old 200 30 230

Total 300 70 370

Page 10: DATA, DATA , DATA: What to Make of It        And How To Use It

Relevance….

• This is just like asking “what percentage of people with AIDS are black?” and “what percentage of black people have AIDS”?

Page 11: DATA, DATA , DATA: What to Make of It        And How To Use It

Are young people more likely to be short than old people?

• Percentage of young people who are short:

• 40 / 140 * 100 = 28.6 %

• Percentage of old people who are short:

• 30 / 230 * 100 = 13.0 %

• So it looks like the answer is yes

Page 12: DATA, DATA , DATA: What to Make of It        And How To Use It

What Else Can We Measure?

• Difference in rates:• 28.6 % - 13.0 % = 15.6%• In words, the percentage of young people who are

short is bigger than the percentage of old people who are short, by 15.6 percentage points

• Ratio of rates:• 28.6 / 13.0 = 2.2• In words, young people are about two times as

likely to be short as old people

Page 13: DATA, DATA , DATA: What to Make of It        And How To Use It

Percentages and Rates

• Percentages are a special case of rates• Percentages have base 100; rates can have any

base (like 1,000 or 100,000)• So if we say, 28.6% of young people are short, we

are saying about 29 out of every 100 young people are short.

• We could express this same quantity as a rate per 100,000:

• 28,400 of every 100,000 young people are short

Page 14: DATA, DATA , DATA: What to Make of It        And How To Use It

When to Use Percentages or Rates?

• Percentages are widely understood when in the range of 1 to 99.

• When a percentage gets really low, it gets hard to understand.

• We can express 1/100,000 as 0.001 per 100 or as .001%, but most people find these harder to grasp intuitively

Page 15: DATA, DATA , DATA: What to Make of It        And How To Use It

Numerators and Denominators

• The numerator is the number on top of the division sign

• The denominator is the number on the bottom of the division sign

• Rate = Numerator / Denominator * Base• The denominator is the number of people at risk• The numerator is the number of cases or events

among the people at risk• The base results in a proportion (if it’s 1), a

percentage (if it’s 100), or a rate (if it’s some other number)

Page 16: DATA, DATA , DATA: What to Make of It        And How To Use It

What is a Proportion?

• Any fraction can be understood as a proportion – say, 7 out of 37 or 7/37.

• The fraction can then be written as a decimal: 7/37 = .189

• This is like a rate with base 1 (percentages have base 100)

• You could say, “.189 out of every 1 people”• Most people find proportions easier to understand

if expressed as a percentage or rate• .189 is equivalent to 18.9%

Page 17: DATA, DATA , DATA: What to Make of It        And How To Use It

One Out of --

• If 50 % of old people are short, we can also say that 1 out of 2 old people are short

• We can see right away that 50 out of 100 is the same as 1 out of 2; we can also use arithmetic: 100 / 50 = 2

• If 12.5 % of old people are short, what can we say?• 100 / 12.5 = 8• “1 out of 8 old people are short”• This conveys exactly the same information as 12.5%, but

many people find it easier to relate to.• Usually statements of this kind are rounded off to the

nearest integer.

Page 18: DATA, DATA , DATA: What to Make of It        And How To Use It

Graphs with Numbers of Cases

Page 19: DATA, DATA , DATA: What to Make of It        And How To Use It

Number of Adult AIDS Cases by Race/EthnicityNumber of Adult AIDS Cases by Race/EthnicityAnd Year of Report, Florida, 1988-2004And Year of Report, Florida, 1988-2004

0

500

1000

1500

2000

2500

3000

3500

4000

4500

90 91 92 93* 94 95 96 97 98 99 00 01 02 03 04Year of Report

Num

ber

of C

ases

Black

Hispanic

White

Other*

*The AIDS case definition was expanded in 1993.

Page 20: DATA, DATA , DATA: What to Make of It        And How To Use It

0

200

400

600

800

1,000

1,200

1,400

99 00 01 02 03 04

Year of Diagnosis

Nu

mb

er o

f C

ases

White Black Hispanic

HIV Cases Among Men Who Have Sex with Men (MSM) By Race/Ethnicity and Year of Diagnosis,and Year of Diagnosis,

Florida, 1999-2004

Note: MSM include MSM/IDUs..

Black

White

Hispanic

Page 21: DATA, DATA , DATA: What to Make of It        And How To Use It

Graphs with Percentages of Cases

Page 22: DATA, DATA , DATA: What to Make of It        And How To Use It

Percentage of Adult AIDS Cases by Race/EthnicityPercentage of Adult AIDS Cases by Race/EthnicityAnd Year of Report, Florida, 1988-2004And Year of Report, Florida, 1988-2004

0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

88 90 92 94 96 98 00 02 04Year of Report

Pe

rce

nta

ge

of

Ca

se

s

Black

Hispanic

White

Other*

*Other includes American Indian/Alaska Natives, Asian/Pacific Islanders, and multi-racial persons..

Page 23: DATA, DATA , DATA: What to Make of It        And How To Use It

Infectious (Primary & Secondary) Syphilis Miami-Dade County, 1999-2004

0%10%20%30%40%50%60%70%80%90%

100%

1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004

Women

Heterosexual men

MSM

N: (82) (125) (184) (231) (194) (213)

Source: STD MIS.

Page 24: DATA, DATA , DATA: What to Make of It        And How To Use It

Pie-charts with Percentages of cases

Page 25: DATA, DATA , DATA: What to Make of It        And How To Use It

AIDS Cases and Population, FloridaAIDS Cases and Population, Florida

29%

17%

1%53%

White

Black

Hispanic

Other

Adult* AIDS Cases by Race/Ethnicity2004 (N=5,797)

2004 Adult* PopulationBy Race/Ethnicity

(N=14,804,070)

67%

14%

17%

2%

WhiteBlack

Hispanic

*13+ yrs.

Black

White

Hispanic

Page 26: DATA, DATA , DATA: What to Make of It        And How To Use It

HIV Cases and Population, FloridaHIV Cases and Population, Florida

30%

19%

2%

49%

White

Black

Hispanic

Other

Adult* HIV Cases By Race/Ethnicity

2004 (N=6,304)

2004 Adult* PopulationBy Race/Ethnicity

(N=14,804,070)

67%

14%

17%

2%

White

Black

Hispanic

*13+ yrs.

Black

White

Hispanic

Page 27: DATA, DATA , DATA: What to Make of It        And How To Use It

Bar Graph with Rates of Cases

Page 28: DATA, DATA , DATA: What to Make of It        And How To Use It

29.4

5.5

184.7

112.9

62.4

16.6

0

20

40

60

80

100

120

140

160

180

200

Male Female

Ra

te p

er

10

0,0

00

White Black

Hispanic

Reported AIDS Case Rates per 100,000 PopulationBy Sex and Race/Ethnicity, Florida, 2004

Page 29: DATA, DATA , DATA: What to Make of It        And How To Use It

How Much Bigger?

• We notice that the incidence rate for Black males is much bigger than the incidence rate for White males – 184.7 per 100,000 versus 29.4 per 100,000.

• Rate difference is 184.7 – 29.4 = 155.3 • Rate ratio is 184.7 / 29.4 = 6.3

• The rate for Black males is 6.3 times that of the rate for White males.

Page 30: DATA, DATA , DATA: What to Make of It        And How To Use It

29.4

5.5

184.7

112.9

62.4

16.6

0

20

40

60

80

100

120

140

160

180

200

Male Female

Rat

e p

er 1

00,0

00

White Black Hispanic

Reported AIDS Case Rates per 100,000 PopulationBy Sex and Race/Ethnicity, Florida, 2004

MALESES Rate ratios Blacks:Whites, 6.3:1 Hispanics:Whites,

2.1:1

FEMALES Rate ratios Black:Whites, 21:1 Hispanics:Whites,

3.0:1

Page 31: DATA, DATA , DATA: What to Make of It        And How To Use It

STD Rates Per 100,000 Population*STD Rates Per 100,000 Population*By Race/Ethnicity, Florida, 2004By Race/Ethnicity, Florida, 2004

Race/ethnicity Gonorrhea Chlamydia SyphilisWhite, non-Hispanic 35.7 105.6 2.7

Black, non-Hispanic 447.4 789.9 9.1

Hispanic 37.5 150.8 4.5

Asian/Pacific Islander 20.9 97.6 1.5

American Indian/ Alaska Native 68.5 198.3 0.0

*Based on 2004 mid-year population estimates.Source: Bureau of STD, Management Information System

Rate Per 100,000 Population

Page 32: DATA, DATA , DATA: What to Make of It        And How To Use It

Survey in Childbearing Women (SCBW)Survey in Childbearing Women (SCBW)HIV Seroprevalence, by Race, Florida, 1989-1996HIV Seroprevalence, by Race, Florida, 1989-1996

024

68

101214

161820

89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96

Year

Ra

te p

er

1,0

00

Bir

ths

Black

White

Page 33: DATA, DATA , DATA: What to Make of It        And How To Use It

Incidence and Prevalence• Incidence: how many new cases of the disease of

interest appeared in the population of interest in the period of interest.

• Incidence rate is number of cases per unit population per unit time

• So if 432 new cases occur in 100,000 people during 2004, the annual incidence rate in 2004 is 432 per 100,000.

• If 216 new cases occur in 43,567 people during January through June of 2004, the annualized incidence rate is

• 216/ 43,567 * 100,000 * 2 = 991.6 per 100,000

Page 34: DATA, DATA , DATA: What to Make of It        And How To Use It

Incidence and Prevalence

• Prevalence is the number of cases currently living in a population, at a particular moment in time.

• Prevalence can also be expressed as a rate, number of cases per unit population.

• Prevalence rate is also measured at a particular moment in time.

Page 35: DATA, DATA , DATA: What to Make of It        And How To Use It

Contact Us

Visit www.FCHAR.org

Spencer Lieb, MPH

HIV Research Coordinator

The AIDS Institute

[email protected]

850-408-4512