CALPACT Webinar: Using Infographics and Data Visualization
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Transcript of CALPACT Webinar: Using Infographics and Data Visualization
Welcome to the Webinar!
New Media Best Practices: Using Infographics and Data Visualization
We will begin shortly…
Today you’ll be hearing from…
Leslie Yang Associate Experience Designer
Awasu Design
Lisa Peterson New Media Educa:on Specialist
CHL/CALPACT
Leslie Safier Director of Research
Healthy Communi:es Ins:tute
Sheila Baxter Director of Business Development Healthy Communi:es Ins:tute
Agenda • Review of session objectives • Housekeeping • Sheila Baxter & Leslie Safier ~ Healthy Communities
Institute (HCI) • Leslie Yang ~ Awasu Design • Conclusion
Objectives • Understand how infographics and data visualiza:on have
been used to communicate complex informa:on • Iden:fy :ps for telling stories • Learn strategies for choosing the right tools to use
Tweet the event!
Use #calpactNM14
Healthy Communities Institute
Leslie Safier Director of Research
Healthy Communi:es Ins:tute
Sheila Baxter Director of Business Development Healthy Communi:es Ins:tute
CALPACT New Media Best Practices:
Using Infographics and Data Visualization
Webinar
May 22, 2014
Sheila Baxter, MPH ‘10 Director of Business Development West/Central Region Healthy Communities Institute
Leslie Safier, MPH ‘10 Director of Research Healthy Communities Institute
Data Visualization Basics 8
Word cloud developed by WordleTM : http://www.wordle.com
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Credit: John Snow, On the Mode of Communication of Cholera.
Early Data Visualizations
• Develop the Story
• Gather and Organize Your Information
• Create and Iterate
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Process Overview
Always Maintain the Integrity of Your Data
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Source: “America’s Newsroom”. Fox News Channel. 31 Mar. 2014. Television.
Source: Gibson, K. (2013 September 24). Black leaders at Purdue find support, recruitment to be community based. Retrieved from http://purdueexponent.org
Healthy Communities Institute Overview
• Mission ‒ Improve the health, vitality and environmental sustainability of communities,
counties and states • Headquarters
‒ Berkeley, California • Problem/Approach
‒ Health data is decentralized ‒ Centralize, make understandable, lead to informed action
• Solution Healthy Communities Institute’s Platform ‒ Provide population health indicator dashboards, geomapped health risk “hotspots,” best practice sharing and evaluation tools
‒ Users: health systems and hospitals, foundations, health departments, collaboratives, any organization assuming risk of populations
• National Relationships/Awards/ Coverage ‒ 2012 Health and Human Services Award: Best Community Health App ‒ 2011 Health and Human Services Award: MyHealthyPeople - Helping Attain The
Health Goals Of Healthy People 2020 ‒ VHA and CHA National Agreements ‒ 100+ million lives in the United States XXX
• 100 – 200 indicators • Color coded • Constantly updated
Community Dashboard
• 2000 in database • Programs & policies • Evaluation-based
Promising Practices
• Form working groups • Set local goals • Manage achievement
of objectives
Initiative Centers • HP 2020 Tracker • Local Priorities tracker • Comparative and
longitudinal evaluation
Evaluation &Tracking
System Capabilities
XXX
San Francisco Citywide Cost Savings and Reduction of ED Overcrowding
due to Alcohol Abuse
14 XXX mm
San Francisco ED Rates: Alcohol Abuse
and
XXX m
Growing Problem
and
XXX m
San Francisco ED Rates: Alcohol Abuse Map
and
XXX m
The Citywide Solution
and
1. 50 San Francisco Stakeholders came together 2. Sober and Respite Center created 3. Van service provides transport from police
or with ambulance crew hand-off 4. 10-14 inebriates diverted from EDs everyday
XXX m
Financial Benefits
and
Operates 24/7 • Daily operating cost: less than $2,700/day
(ambulance ride and ED visit) • Annual operating cost: $1 million/year • Approximate value cost avoidance: $9 million/year
XXX m
A Creative Solution
and
Success • Reduced citywide costs for chronic public inebriates Ingredients that Solved the Problem • Statewide Hospital data tell the story • Multi-sector collaborative and citywide solution
XXX m
The HCN System
Thank You!
For more information
Sheila Baxter [email protected] Leslie Safier [email protected] Healthy Communities Institute http://www.healthycommunitiesinstitute.com/ Sample Client Sites Douglas County: http://www.douglascohealth.org/ St. Mary Medical Center : http://www.stmaryhealthcare.org/CommunityHealthDataandResources Alameda County: http://www.healthyalamedacounty.org/
HCI Platform System
XXX
• Develop the Story ‒ What story are you trying to tell? Consider what data is necessary to support
your story. ‒ What questions will your visualization allow you to explore or answer? ‒ Why will users be viewing or interacting with the visualization?
• Gather and Organize Your Information ‒ Think about the best ways to summarize your spreadsheets. ‒ Consider your primary audience and their data literacy. ‒ Determine what information is critical for understanding. ‒ Use tools such as color, iconography and typography to display critical
information. • Create and Iterate
‒ Sketch out early ideas. ‒ Get feedback early and often. ‒ Keep your purpose and user in mind. ‒ Maintain the integrity of the data through scales, legends, and display. ‒ Simplify!
Process Summary
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Data Visualization Tools and Resources*
Books • Few, Stephen. (2009) Now You See It. Oakland, CA: Analytics Press. • Tufte, Edward. (1983). The Visual Display of Quantitative Information.
Cheshire, CT: Graphics Press. Background Information
• Duke University Libraries. Introduction to Data Visualization. http://guides.library.duke.edu/vis_types
• Anne K. Emery. The Dataviz Design Process: 7 Steps for Beginners. http://annkemery.com/dataviz-design-process/
Tools • Fast Company Magazine. 30 Simple Tools for Data Visualization.
http://www.fastcodesign.com/3029239/infographic-of-the-day/30-simple-tools-for-data-visualization
• Google Fusion Tables.https://support.google.com/fusiontables/answer/2571232
• Tableu Public. http://www.tableausoftware.com/public/ • Many Eyes. http://www.manyeyes.com
*This is by no means an exhaustive list. It contains information we came across while developing this presentation that may be useful to you.
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Data Visualization Tools and Resources (pg 2)*
*This is by no means an exhaustive list. It contains information we came across while developing this presentation that may be useful to you.
Inspiration • The Guardian. http://www.theguardian.com/data • Information is Beautiful. http://www.informationisbeautiful.net/ • Flowing Data. http://flowingdata.com/ • GE Data Visualization. http://visualization.geblogs.com/ • NEWSVIS. http://newsvis.org/ • Visual Complexity. http://www.visualcomplexity.com/vc/ • Reddit Data is Beautiful. http://www.reddit.com/r/dataisbeautiful
Q & A for Sheila and Leslie • Send a ques:on or comment using the chat box func:on
• Click “raise hand” buQon to be taken off mute and ask a ques:on verbally
Leslie Safier Director of Research
Healthy Communi:es Ins:tute
Sheila Baxter Director of Business Development Healthy Communi:es Ins:tute
Awasu Design
Leslie Yang Associate Experience Designer
Awasu Design
Q & A for Leslie • Send a ques:on or comment using the chat box func:on
• Click “raise hand” buQon to be taken off mute and ask a ques:on verbally
Leslie Yang Associate Experience Designer
Awasu Design
Speaker Contact Information
Sheila Baxter
Sheila.Baxter@healthyci:es.org
Leslie Safier leslie@healthyci:es.org
Leslie Yang
What action step will you take after the webinar? • What do you think you can do in the next month to
further your goals with infographics & data visualization? • Let us know ~ we’d love to check back with you and hear how
it’s going! • We appreciate your feedback!
Thank you!
Questions? Contact us at [email protected]
Learn more about other trainings:
http://chl.berkeley.edu/events/newmedia/2014-new-media-trainings/sessions.html