Advances in mapping population and demographic characteristics at small-area levels

Author:

Fecht Daniela1,Cockings Samantha2ORCID,Hodgson Susan1ORCID,Piel Frédéric B1ORCID,Martin David2ORCID,Waller Lance A3

Affiliation:

1. UK Small Area Health Statistics Unit, MRC-PHE Centre for Environment and Health, Imperial College London, St Mary’s Campus, London, UK

2. School of Geography and Environmental Science, University of Southampton, Southampton, UK

3. Department of Biostatistics and Bioinformatics, Rollins School of Public Health, Emory University, Atlanta, GA, USA

Abstract

Abstract Temporally and spatially highly resolved information on population characteristics, including demographic profile (e.g. age and sex), ethnicity and socio-economic status (e.g. income, occupation, education), are essential for observational health studies at the small-area level. Time-relevant population data are critical as denominators for health statistics, analytics and epidemiology, to calculate rates or risks of disease. Demographic and socio-economic characteristics are key determinants of health and important confounders in the relationship between environmental contaminants and health. In many countries, census data have long been the source of small-area population denominators and confounder information. A strength of the traditional census model has been its careful design and high level of population coverage, allowing high-quality detailed data to be released for small areas periodically, e.g. every 10 years. The timeliness of data, however, becomes a challenge when temporally and spatially highly accurate annual (or even more frequent) data at high spatial resolution are needed, for example, for health surveillance and epidemiological studies. Additionally, the approach to collecting demographic population information is changing in the era of open and big data and may eventually evolve to using combinations of administrative and other data, supplemented by surveys. We discuss different approaches to address these challenges including (i) the US American Community Survey, a rolling sample of the US population census, (ii) the use of spatial analysis techniques to compile temporally and spatially high-resolution demographic data and (iii) the use of administrative and big data sources as proxies for demographic characteristics.

Funder

Small Area Health Statistics Unit

Public Health England

Medical Research Council

Public Health England Centre for Environment and Health

Economic and Social Research Council Awards

University of Southampton Population247 research

Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health & Human Development

NICHD

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

General Medicine,Epidemiology

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