43 datasets found
  1. d

    Census Data

    • catalog.data.gov
    • datadiscoverystudio.org
    • +3more
    Updated Mar 1, 2024
    Share
    FacebookFacebook
    TwitterTwitter
    Email
    Click to copy link
    Link copied
    Close
    Cite
    U.S. Bureau of the Census (2024). Census Data [Dataset]. https://catalog.data.gov/dataset/census-data
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Mar 1, 2024
    Dataset provided by
    U.S. Bureau of the Census
    Description

    The Bureau of the Census has released Census 2000 Summary File 1 (SF1) 100-Percent data. The file includes the following population items: sex, age, race, Hispanic or Latino origin, household relationship, and household and family characteristics. Housing items include occupancy status and tenure (whether the unit is owner or renter occupied). SF1 does not include information on incomes, poverty status, overcrowded housing or age of housing. These topics will be covered in Summary File 3. Data are available for states, counties, county subdivisions, places, census tracts, block groups, and, where applicable, American Indian and Alaskan Native Areas and Hawaiian Home Lands. The SF1 data are available on the Bureau's web site and may be retrieved from American FactFinder as tables, lists, or maps. Users may also download a set of compressed ASCII files for each state via the Bureau's FTP server. There are over 8000 data items available for each geographic area. The full listing of these data items is available here as a downloadable compressed data base file named TABLES.ZIP. The uncompressed is in FoxPro data base file (dbf) format and may be imported to ACCESS, EXCEL, and other software formats. While all of this information is useful, the Office of Community Planning and Development has downloaded selected information for all states and areas and is making this information available on the CPD web pages. The tables and data items selected are those items used in the CDBG and HOME allocation formulas plus topics most pertinent to the Comprehensive Housing Affordability Strategy (CHAS), the Consolidated Plan, and similar overall economic and community development plans. The information is contained in five compressed (zipped) dbf tables for each state. When uncompressed the tables are ready for use with FoxPro and they can be imported into ACCESS, EXCEL, and other spreadsheet, GIS and database software. The data are at the block group summary level. The first two characters of the file name are the state abbreviation. The next two letters are BG for block group. Each record is labeled with the code and name of the city and county in which it is located so that the data can be summarized to higher-level geography. The last part of the file name describes the contents . The GEO file contains standard Census Bureau geographic identifiers for each block group, such as the metropolitan area code and congressional district code. The only data included in this table is total population and total housing units. POP1 and POP2 contain selected population variables and selected housing items are in the HU file. The MA05 table data is only for use by State CDBG grantees for the reporting of the racial composition of beneficiaries of Area Benefit activities. The complete package for a state consists of the dictionary file named TABLES, and the five data files for the state. The logical record number (LOGRECNO) links the records across tables.

  2. c

    2021 Census: Safeguarded Household Microdata Sample (England and Wales)

    • datacatalogue.cessda.eu
    Updated Dec 18, 2024
    + more versions
    Share
    FacebookFacebook
    TwitterTwitter
    Email
    Click to copy link
    Link copied
    Close
    Cite
    Office for National Statistics (2024). 2021 Census: Safeguarded Household Microdata Sample (England and Wales) [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.5255/UKDA-SN-9156-1
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Dec 18, 2024
    Authors
    Office for National Statistics
    Area covered
    England, Wales
    Variables measured
    Families/households, Individuals, National
    Measurement technique
    Compilation/Synthesis, Web-based interview, Self-administered questionnaire
    Description

    Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.

    The 2021 UK Census was the 23rd official census of the United Kingdom. The UK Census is generally conducted once every 10 years, and the 2021 censuses of England, Wales, and Northern Ireland took place on 21 March 2021. In Scotland, the decision was made to move the census to March 2022 because of the impact of the coronavirus pandemic. The censuses were administered by the Office for National Statistics (ONS), the Northern Ireland Statistics and Research Agency (NISRA) and National Records of Scotland (NRS), respectively. In England and Wales, Census 2021 was the first census with a digital-first design, encouraging participants to respond online rather than on a paper questionnaire.

    Topics covered in the 2021 UK Census included:

    • demography and migration
    • ethnic group, national identity, language and religion
    • labour market and travel to work
    • housing
    • education
    • health, disability, and unpaid care
    • Welsh and other languages
    • UK armed forces veterans
    • sexual orientation and gender identity.

    The 2021 Census: Safeguarded Household Microdata Sample dataset consists of a random sample of 1% of households from the 2021 Census and contains records for all individuals within these sampled households. It includes records for 263,729 households and 606,210 persons. These data cover England and Wales only. This sample allows linkage between individuals in the same household.  The lowest level of geography is Wales and regions within England. It contains 56 variables and a low level of detail. This is a new ONS product following user feedback from the 2011 Census.

    Census Microdata

    Microdata are small samples of individual records from a single census from which identifying information have been removed. They contain a range of individual and household characteristics and can be used to carry out analysis not possible from standard census outputs, such as:

    • creating tables using bespoke variable combinations
    • investigating specific combinations of variables or categories in a high level of detail
    • conducting non-tabular statistical analyses on record-level data.

    The microdata samples are designed to protect the confidentiality of individuals and households. This is done by applying access controls and removing information that might directly identify a person, such as names, addresses and date of birth. Record swapping is applied to the census data used to create the microdata samples. This is a statistical disclosure control (SDC) method, which makes very small changes to the data to prevent the identification of individuals. The microdata samples use further SDC methods, such as collapsing variables and restricting detail. The samples also include records that have been edited to prevent inconsistent data and contain imputed persons, households, and data values. To protect confidentiality, imputation flags are not included in any 2021 Census microdata sample.


    Main Topics:



    The 2021 Census: Safeguarded Household Microdata Sample data cover: demography, education, ethnicity, identity, language, religion, health, disability, unpaid care, housing, internal migration, international migration, labour market, students, and travel to work.

  3. Z

    Data from: 1805-1898 Census Records of Lausanne : a Long Digital Dataset for...

    • data.niaid.nih.gov
    Updated Mar 21, 2023
    Share
    FacebookFacebook
    TwitterTwitter
    Email
    Click to copy link
    Link copied
    Close
    Cite
    Rappo, Lucas (2023). 1805-1898 Census Records of Lausanne : a Long Digital Dataset for Demographic History [Dataset]. https://data.niaid.nih.gov/resources?id=zenodo_7711639
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Mar 21, 2023
    Dataset provided by
    di Lenardo, Isabella
    Petitpierre, Remi
    Rappo, Lucas
    Kramer, Marion
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Area covered
    Lausanne
    Description

    Context. This historical dataset stems from the project of automatic extraction of 72 census records of Lausanne, Switzerland. The complete dataset covers a century of historical demography in Lausanne (1805-1898), which corresponds to 18,831 pages, and nearly 6 million cells.

    Content. The data published in this repository correspond to a first release, i.e. a diachronic slice of one register every 8 to 9 years. Unfortunately, the remaining data are currently under embargo. Their publication will take place as soon as possible, and at the latest by the end of 2023. In the meantime, the data presented here correspond to a large subset of 2,844 pages, which already allows to investigate most research hypotheses.

    Description. The population censuses, digitized by the Archives of the city of Lausanne, continuously cover the evolution of the population in Lausanne throughout the 19th century, starting in 1805, with only one long interruption from 1814 to 1831. Highly detailed, they are an invaluable source for studying migration, economic and social history, and traces of cultural exchanges not only with Bern, but also with France and Italy. Indeed, the system of tracing family origin, specific to Switzerland, allows to follow the migratory movements of families long before the censuses appeared. The bourgeoisie is also an essential economic tracer. In addition, censuses extensively describe the organization of the social fabric into family nuclei, around which gravitate various boarders, workers, servants or apprentices, often living in the same apartment with the family.

    Production. The structure and richness of censuses have also provided an opportunity to develop automatic methods for processing structured documents. The processing of censuses includes several steps, from the identification of text segments to the restructuring of information as digital tabular data, through Handwritten Text Recognition and the automatic segmentation of the structure using neural networks. Please note that the detailed extraction methodology, as well as the complete evaluation of performance and reliability is published in:

    Petitpierre R., Rappo L., Kramer M. (2023). An end-to-end pipeline for historical censuses processing. International Journal on Document Analysis and Recognition (IJDAR). doi: 10.1007/s10032-023-00428-9

    Data structure. The data are structured in rows and columns, with each row corresponding to a household. Multiple entries in the same column for a single household are separated by vertical bars ⟨|⟩. The center point ⟨·⟩ indicates an empty entry. For some columns (e.g., street name, house number, owner name), an empty entry indicates that the last non-empty value should be carried over. The page number is in the last column.

    Liability. The data presented here are not curated nor verified. They are the raw results of the extraction, the reliability of which was thoroughly assessed in the above-mentioned publication. We insist on the fact that for any reuse of this data for research purposes, the implementation of an appropriate methodology is necessary. This may typically include string distance heuristics, or statistical methodologies to deal with noise and uncertainty.

  4. d

    Data from: [Dataset:] Data from Tree Censuses and Inventories in Panama

    • search.dataone.org
    Updated Aug 16, 2024
    + more versions
    Share
    FacebookFacebook
    TwitterTwitter
    Email
    Click to copy link
    Link copied
    Close
    Cite
    Richard Condit; Rolando Pẽrez; Salomõn Aguilar; Suzanne Lao (2024). [Dataset:] Data from Tree Censuses and Inventories in Panama [Dataset]. https://search.dataone.org/view/urn%3Auuid%3A07030ed9-e51f-4ffa-a4b5-921392681123
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Aug 16, 2024
    Dataset provided by
    Smithsonian Research Data Repository
    Authors
    Richard Condit; Rolando Pẽrez; Salomõn Aguilar; Suzanne Lao
    Description

    Abstract: These are results from a network of 65 tree census plots in Panama. At each, every individual stem in a rectangular area of specified size is given a unique number and identified to species, then stem diameter measured in one or more censuses. Data from these numerous plots and inventories were collected following the same methods as, and species identity harmonized with, the 50-ha long-term tree census at Barro Colorado Island. Precise location of every site, elevation, and estimated rainfall (for many sites) are also included. These data were gathered over many years, starting in 1994 and continuing to the present, by principal investigators R. Condit, R. Perez, S. Lao, and S. Aguilar. Funding has been provided by many organizations.

    Description:

    marenaRecent.full.Rdata5Jan2013.zip: A zip archive holding one R Analytical Table, a version of the Marena plots' census data in R format, designed for data analysis. This and all other tables labelled 'full' have one record per individual tree found in that census. Detailed documentations of the 'full' tables is given in RoutputFull.pdf (see component 10 below); an additional column 'plot' is included because the table includes records from many different locations. Plot coordinates are given in PanamaPlot.txt (component 12 below). This one file, 'marenaRecent.full1.rdata', has data from the latest census at 60 different plots. These are the best data to use if only a single plot census is needed. marena2cns.full.Rdata5Jan2013.zip: R Analytical Tables of the style 'full' for 44 plots with two censuses: 'marena2cns.full1.rdata' for the first census and 'marena2cns.full2.rdata' for the second census. These 44 plots are a subset of the 60 found in marenaRecent.full (component 1): the 44 that have been censused two or more times. These are the best data to use if two plot censuses are needed. marena3cns.full.Rdata5Jan2013.zip. R Analytical Tables of the style 'full' for nine plots with three censuses: 'marena3cns.full1.rdata' for the first census through 'marena2cns.full3.rdata' for the third census. These nine plots are a subset of the 44 found in marena2cns.full (component 2): the nine that have been censused three or more times. These are the best data to use if three plot censuses are needed. marena4cns.full.Rdata5Jan2013.zip. R Analytical Tables of the style 'full' for six plots with four censuses: 'marena4cns.full1.rdata' for the first census through 'marena4cns.full4.rdata' for the fourth census. These six plots are a subset of the nine found in marena3cns.full (component 3): the six that have been censused four or more times. These are the best data to use if four plot censuses are needed. marenaRecent.stem.Rdata5Jan2013.zip. A zip archive holding one R Analytical Table, a version of the Marena plots' census data in R format. These are designed for data analysis. This one file, 'marenaRecent.full1.rdata', has data from the latest census at 60 different plots. The table has one record per individual stem, necessary because some individual trees have more than one stem. Detailed documentations of these tables is given in RoutputFull.pdf (see component 11 below); an additional column 'plot' is included because the table includes records from many different locations. Plot coordinates are given in PanamaPlot.txt (component 12 below). These are the best data to use if only a single plot census is needed, and individual stems are desired. marena2cns.stem.Rdata5Jan2013.zip. R Analytical Tables of the style 'stem' for 44 plots with two censuses: 'marena2cns.stem1.rdata' for the first census and 'marena3cns.stem2.rdata' for the second census. These 44 plots are a subset of the 60 found in marenaRecent.stem (component 1): the 44 that have been censused two or more times. These are the best data to use if two plot censuses are needed, and individual stems are desired. marena3cns.stem.Rdata5Jan2013.zip. R Analytical Tables of the style 'stem' for nine plots with three censuses: 'marena3cns.stem1.rdata' for the first census through 'marena3cns.stem3.rdata' for the third census. These nine plots are a subset of the 44 found in marena2cns.stem (component 6): the nine that have been censused three or more times. These are the best data to use if three plot censuses are needed, and individual stems are desired. marena4cns.stem.Rdata5Jan2013.zip. R Analytical Tables of the style 'stem' for six plots with four censuses: 'marena3cns.stem1.rdata' for the first census through 'marena3cns.stem3.rdata' for the third census. These six plots are a subset of the nine found in marena3cns.stem (component 7): the six that have been censused four or more times. These are the best data to use if four plot censuses are needed, and individual stems are desired. bci.spptable.rdata. A list of the 1414 species found across all tree plots and inventories i... Visit https://dataone.org/datasets/urn%3Auuid%3A07030ed9-e51f-4ffa-a4b5-921392681123 for complete metadata about this dataset.

  5. D

    ARCHIVED: COVID-19 Testing by Race/Ethnicity Over Time

    • data.sfgov.org
    • healthdata.gov
    • +1more
    application/rdfxml +5
    Updated Jan 12, 2024
    + more versions
    Share
    FacebookFacebook
    TwitterTwitter
    Email
    Click to copy link
    Link copied
    Close
    Cite
    Department of Public Health - Population Health Division (2024). ARCHIVED: COVID-19 Testing by Race/Ethnicity Over Time [Dataset]. https://data.sfgov.org/Health-and-Social-Services/ARCHIVED-COVID-19-Testing-by-Race-Ethnicity-Over-T/kja3-qsky
    Explore at:
    xml, csv, json, tsv, application/rssxml, application/rdfxmlAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Jan 12, 2024
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Department of Public Health - Population Health Division
    License

    ODC Public Domain Dedication and Licence (PDDL) v1.0http://www.opendatacommons.org/licenses/pddl/1.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    A. SUMMARY This dataset includes San Francisco COVID-19 tests by race/ethnicity and by date. This dataset represents the daily count of tests collected, and the breakdown of test results (positive, negative, or indeterminate). Tests in this dataset include all those collected from persons who listed San Francisco as their home address at the time of testing. It also includes tests that were collected by San Francisco providers for persons who were missing a locating address. This dataset does not include tests for residents listing a locating address outside of San Francisco, even if they were tested in San Francisco.

    The data were de-duplicated by individual and date, so if a person gets tested multiple times on different dates, all tests will be included in this dataset (on the day each test was collected). If a person tested multiple times on the same date, only one test is included from that date. When there are multiple tests on the same date, a positive result, if one exists, will always be selected as the record for the person. If a PCR and antigen test are taken on the same day, the PCR test will supersede. If a person tests multiple times on the same day and the results are all the same (e.g. all negative or all positive) then the first test done is selected as the record for the person.

    The total number of positive test results is not equal to the total number of COVID-19 cases in San Francisco.

    When a person gets tested for COVID-19, they may be asked to report information about themselves. One piece of information that might be requested is a person's race and ethnicity. These data are often incomplete in the laboratory and provider reports of the test results sent to the health department. The data can be missing or incomplete for several possible reasons:

    • The person was not asked about their race and ethnicity.
    • The person was asked, but refused to answer.
    • The person answered, but the testing provider did not include the person's answers in the reports.
    • The testing provider reported the person's answers in a format that could not be used by the health department.
    

    For any of these reasons, a person's race/ethnicity will be recorded in the dataset as “Unknown.”

    B. NOTE ON RACE/ETHNICITY The different values for Race/Ethnicity in this dataset are "Asian;" "Black or African American;" "Hispanic or Latino/a, all races;" "American Indian or Alaska Native;" "Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander;" "White;" "Multi-racial;" "Other;" and “Unknown."

    The Race/Ethnicity categorization increases data clarity by emulating the methodology used by the U.S. Census in the American Community Survey. Specifically, persons who identify as "Asian," "Black or African American," "American Indian or Alaska Native," "Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander," "White," "Multi-racial," or "Other" do NOT include any person who identified as Hispanic/Latino at any time in their testing reports that either (1) identified them as SF residents or (2) as someone who tested without a locating address by an SF provider. All persons across all races who identify as Hispanic/Latino are recorded as “"Hispanic or Latino/a, all races." This categorization increases data accuracy by correcting the way “Other” persons were counted. Previously, when a person reported “Other” for Race/Ethnicity, they would be recorded “Unknown.” Under the new categorization, they are counted as “Other” and are distinct from “Unknown.”

    If a person records their race/ethnicity as “Asian,” “Black or African American,” “American Indian or Alaska Native,” “Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander,” “White,” or “Other” for their first COVID-19 test, then this data will not change—even if a different race/ethnicity is reported for this person for any future COVID-19 test. There are two exceptions to this rule. The first exception is if a person’s race/ethnicity value is reported as “Unknown” on their first test and then on a subsequent test they report “Asian;” "Black or African American;" "Hispanic or Latino/a, all races;" "American Indian or Alaska Native;" "Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander;" or "White”, then this subsequent reported race/ethnicity will overwrite the previous recording of “Unknown”. If a person has only ever selected “Unknown” as their race/ethnicity, then it will be recorded as “Unknown.” This change provides more specific and actionable data on who is tested in San Francisco.

    The second exception is if a person ever marks “Hispanic or Latino/a, all races” for race/ethnicity then this choice will always overwrite any previous or future response. This is because it is an overarching category that can include any and all other races and is mutually exclusive with the other responses.

    A person's race/ethnicity will be recorded as “Multi-racial” if they select two or more values among the following choices: “Asian,” “Black or African American,” “American Indian or Alaska Native,” “Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander,” “White,” or “Other.” If a person selects a combination of two or more race/ethnicity answers that includes “Hispanic or Latino/a, all races” then they will still be recorded as “Hispanic or Latino/a, all races”—not as “Multi-racial.”

    C. HOW THE DATASET IS CREATED COVID-19 laboratory test data is based on electronic laboratory test reports. Deduplication, quality assurance measures and other data verification processes maximize accuracy of laboratory test information.

    D. UPDATE PROCESS Updates automatically at 5:00AM Pacific Time each day. Redundant runs are scheduled at 7:00AM and 9:00AM in case of pipeline failure.

    E. HOW TO USE THIS DATASET San Francisco population estimates for race/ethnicity can be found in a view based on the San Francisco Population and Demographic Census dataset. These population estimates are from the 2016-2020 5-year American Community Survey (ACS).

    Due to the high degree of variation in the time needed to complete tests by different labs there is a delay in this reporting. On March 24, 2020 the Health Officer ordered all labs in the City to report complete COVID-19 testing information to the local and state health departments.

    In order to track trends over time, a user can analyze this data by sorting or filtering by the "specimen_collection_date" field.

    Calculating Percent Positivity: The positivity rate is the percentage of tests that return a positive result for COVID-19 (positive tests divided by the sum of positive and negative tests). Indeterminate results, which could not conclusively determine whether COVID-19 virus was present, are not included in the calculation of percent positive. When there are fewer than 20 positives tests for a given race/ethnicity and time period, the positivity rate is not calculated for the public tracker because rates of small test counts are less reliable.

    Calculating Testing Rates: To calculate the testing rate per 10,000 residents, divide the total number of tests collected (positive, negative, and indeterminate results) for the specified race/ethnicity by the total number of residents who identify as that race/ethnicity (according to the 2016-2020 American Community Survey (ACS) population estimate), then multiply by 10,000. When there are fewer than 20 total tests for a given race/ethnicity and time period, the testing rate is not calculated for the public tracker because rates of small test counts are less reliable.

    Read more about how this data is updated and validated daily: https://sf.gov/information/covid-19-data-questions

    F. CHANGE LOG

    • 1/12/2024 - This dataset will stop updating as of 1/12/2024
    • 6/21/2023 - A small number of additional COVID-19 testing records were released as part of our ongoing data cleaning efforts. An update to the race or ethnicity designation among a subset of testing records was simultaneously released.
    • 1/31/2023 - updated “population_estimate” column to reflect the 2020 Census Bureau American Community Survey (ACS) San Francisco Population estimates.
    • 1/31/2023 - renamed column “last_updated_at” to “data_as_of”.
    • 3/23/2022 - ‘Native American’ changed to ‘American Indian or Alaska Native’ to align with the census.
    • 2/10/2022 - race/ethnicity categorization was changed. See section NOTE ON RACE/ETHNICITY for additional information.
    • 4/16/2021 - dataset updated to refresh with a five-day data lag.

  6. 2022 Economic Census of Island Areas: IA2200IND16 | Island Areas: Value of...

    • data.census.gov
    Updated Dec 19, 2024
    Share
    FacebookFacebook
    TwitterTwitter
    Email
    Click to copy link
    Link copied
    Close
    Cite
    ECN (2024). 2022 Economic Census of Island Areas: IA2200IND16 | Island Areas: Value of Products Shipped and Contract Receipts by Manufacturing Industry and Class of Customer for Puerto Rico: 2022 (ECNIA Economic Census of Island Areas) [Dataset]. https://data.census.gov/cedsci/table?q=&t=Class%20of%20Customer
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Dec 19, 2024
    Dataset provided by
    United States Census Bureauhttp://census.gov/
    Authors
    ECN
    License

    CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedicationhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Time period covered
    2022
    Description

    Key Table Information.Table Title.Island Areas: Value of Products Shipped and Contract Receipts by Manufacturing Industry and Class of Customer for Puerto Rico: 2022.Table ID.ISLANDAREASIND2022.IA2200IND16.Survey/Program.Economic Census of Island Areas.Year.2022.Dataset.ECNIA Economic Census of Island Areas.Source.U.S. Census Bureau, 2022 Economic Census of Island Areas, Core Statistics.Release Date.2024-12-19.Release Schedule.The Economic Census occurs every five years, in years ending in 2 and 7.2022 Economic Census of Island Areas tables are released on a flow basis from June through December 2024.For more information about economic census planned data product releases, see 2022 Economic Census Release Schedule..Dataset Universe. The dataset universe consists of all establishments that are in operation for at least some part of 2022, are located in Puerto Rico, have paid employees, and are classified in one of eighteen in-scope sectors defined by the 2022 NAICS..Sponsor.U.S. Department of Commerce.Methodology.Data Items and Other Identifying Records.Number of establishmentsValue of products shipped and contract receipts ($1,000)Each record includes a CLASSCUST code, which represents a specific class of customer category.Each record includes a COUNDEST code, which represents a specific country of destination of products shipped and source of contract receipts category.The data are shown for class of customer and country of destination of products shipped and source of contract receipts.Definitions can be found by clicking on the column header in the table or by accessing the Economic Census Glossary..Unit(s) of Observation.The reporting units for the Economic Census of Island Areas are employer establishments. An establishment is generally a single physical location where business is conducted or where services or industrial operations are performed..Geography Coverage.The data are shown for employer establishments and firms that vary by industry:At the Territory level for Puerto RicoFor information about economic census geographies, including changes for 2022, see Economic Census: Economic Geographies..Industry Coverage.The data are shown for Puerto Rico at the 2- through 4-digit 2022 NAICS code levels for the manufacturing industry.For information about NAICS, see Economic Census Code Lists..Sampling.The Economic Census of Island Areas is a complete enumeration of establishments located in the islands (i.e., all establishments on the sampling frame are included in the sample). Therefore, the accuracy of tabulations is not affected by sampling error..Confidentiality.The Census Bureau has reviewed this data product to ensure appropriate access, use, and disclosure avoidance protection of the confidential source data (Project No. 7504609, Disclosure Review Board (DRB) approval number: CBDRB-FY24-0044).The primary method of disclosure avoidance protection is noise infusion. Under this method, the quantitative data values such as sales or payroll for each establishment are perturbed prior to tabulation by applying a random noise multiplier (i.e., factor). Each establishment is assigned a single noise factor, which is applied to all its quantitative data value. Using this method, most published cell totals are perturbed by at most a few percentage points.To comply with disclosure avoidance guidelines, data rows with fewer than three contributing establishments are not presented. For more information on disclosure avoidance, see Methodology for the 2022 Economic Census- Island Areas..Technical Documentation/Methodology.For detailed information about the methods used to collect data and produce statistics, see Methodology for the 2022 Economic Census- Island Areas.For more information about survey questionnaires, Primary Business Activity/NAICS codes, and NAPCS codes, see Economic Census Technical Documentation..Weights.Because the Economic Census of Island Areas is a complete enumeration, there is no sample weighting..Table Information.FTP Download.https://www2.census.gov/programs-surveys/economic-census/data/2022/sector00.API Information.Economic census data are housed in the Census Bureau Application Programming Interface (API)..Symbols.D - Withheld to avoid disclosing data for individual companies; data are included in higher level totalsN - Not available or not comparableS - Estimate does not meet publication standards because of high sampling variability, poor response quality, or other concerns about the estimate quality. Unpublished estimates derived from this table by subtraction are subject to these same limitations and should not be attributed to the U.S. Census Bureau. For a description of publication standards and the total quantity response rate, see link to program methodology page.X - Not applicableA - Relative standard error of 100% or morer - Reviseds - Relative standard error exceeds 40%For a complete list of symbols, see Economic Census Data Dictionary..Data-Specific Notes.Data users who ...

  7. 2021 Census: Safeguarded Individual Microdata Sample at Grouped Local...

    • beta.ukdataservice.ac.uk
    • datacatalogue.cessda.eu
    Updated 2024
    Share
    FacebookFacebook
    TwitterTwitter
    Email
    Click to copy link
    Link copied
    Close
    Cite
    Office For National Statistics (2024). 2021 Census: Safeguarded Individual Microdata Sample at Grouped Local Authority Level (England and Wales) [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.5255/ukda-sn-9155-1
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    2024
    Dataset provided by
    UK Data Servicehttps://ukdataservice.ac.uk/
    datacite
    Authors
    Office For National Statistics
    Area covered
    England, Wales
    Description
    The 2021 UK Census was the 23rd official census of the United Kingdom. The UK Census is generally conducted once every 10 years, and the 2021 censuses of England, Wales, and Northern Ireland took place on 21 March 2021. In Scotland, the decision was made to move the census to March 2022 because of the impact of the coronavirus pandemic. The censuses were administered by the Office for National Statistics (ONS), the Northern Ireland Statistics and Research Agency (NISRA) and National Records of Scotland (NRS), respectively. In England and Wales, Census 2021 was the first census with a digital-first design, encouraging participants to respond online rather than on a paper questionnaire.

    Topics covered in the 2021 UK Census included:

    • demography and migration
    • ethnic group, national identity, language and religion
    • labour market and travel to work
    • housing
    • education
    • health, disability, and unpaid care
    • Welsh and other languages
    • UK armed forces veterans
    • sexual orientation and gender identity.

    The 2021 Census: Safeguarded Individual Microdata Sample at Grouped Local Authority Level dataset consists of a random sample of 5% of person records from the 2021 Census. It includes records for 3,021,611 persons. These data cover England and Wales only. The lowest level of geography is grouped local authority. This means groups of local authorities or single local authorities where the population reaches at least 120,000 persons. The dataset contains 87 variables and a low level of detail.

    Census Microdata

    Microdata are small samples of individual records from a single census from which identifying information have been removed. They contain a range of individual and household characteristics and can be used to carry out analysis not possible from standard census outputs, such as:

    • creating tables using bespoke variable combinations
    • investigating specific combinations of variables or categories in a high level of detail
    • conducting non-tabular statistical analyses on record-level data.

    The microdata samples are designed to protect the confidentiality of individuals and households. This is done by applying access controls and removing information that might directly identify a person, such as names, addresses and date of birth. Record swapping is applied to the census data used to create the microdata samples. This is a statistical disclosure control (SDC) method, which makes very small changes to the data to prevent the identification of individuals. The microdata samples use further SDC methods, such as collapsing variables and restricting detail. The samples also include records that have been edited to prevent inconsistent data and contain imputed persons, households, and data values. To protect confidentiality, imputation flags are not included in any 2021 Census microdata sample.

  8. T

    Population Projections for Napa County

    • data.countyofnapa.org
    application/rdfxml +5
    Updated Aug 10, 2023
    Share
    FacebookFacebook
    TwitterTwitter
    Email
    Click to copy link
    Link copied
    Close
    Cite
    California Department of Finance (2023). Population Projections for Napa County [Dataset]. https://data.countyofnapa.org/w/sjku-zj9t/default?cur=k51EY2NFN98&from=WYY12hn5n26
    Explore at:
    tsv, application/rdfxml, application/rssxml, csv, json, xmlAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Aug 10, 2023
    Dataset authored and provided by
    California Department of Finance
    Area covered
    Napa County
    Description

    Data Source: CA Department of Finance, Demographic Research Unit

    Report P-3: Population Projections, California, 2010-2060 (Baseline 2019 Population Projections; Vintage 2020 Release). Sacramento: California. July 2021.

    This data biography shares the how, who, what, where, when, and why about this dataset. We, the epidemiology team at Napa County Health and Human Services Agency, Public Health Division, created it to help you understand where the data we analyze and share comes from. If you have any further questions, we can be reached at epidemiology@countyofnapa.org.

    Data dashboard featuring this data: Napa County Demographics https://data.countyofnapa.org/stories/s/bu3n-fytj

    How was the data collected? Population projections use the following demographic balancing equation: Current Population = Previous Population + (Births - Deaths) +Net Migration

    Previous Population: the starting point for the population projection estimates is the 2020 US Census, informed by the Population Estimates Program data.

    Births and Deaths: birth and death totals came from the California Department of Public Health, Vital Statistics Branch, which maintains birth and death records for California.

    Net Migration: multiple sources of administrative records were used to estimate net migration, including driver’s license address changes, IRS tax return data, Medicare and Medi-Cal enrollment, federal immigration reports, elementary school enrollments, and group quarters population.

    Who was included and excluded from the data? Previous Population: The goal of the US Census is to reflect all populations residing in a given geographic area. Results of two analyses done by the US Census Bureau showed that the 2020 Census total population counts were consistent with recent counts despite the challenges added by the pandemic. However, some populations were undercounted (the Black or African American population, the American Indian or Alaska Native population living on a reservation, the Hispanic or Latino population, and people who reported being of Some Other Race), and some were overcounted (the Non-Hispanic White population and the Asian population). Children, especially children younger than 4, were also undercounted.

    Births and Deaths: Birth records include all people who are born in California as well as births to California residents that happened out of state. Death records include people who died while in California, as well as deaths of California residents that occurred out of state. Because birth and death record data comes from a registration process, the demographic information provided may not be accurate or complete.

    Net Migration: each of the multiple sources of administrative records that were used to estimate net migration include and exclude different groups. For details about methodology, see https://dof.ca.gov/wp-content/uploads/sites/352/2023/07/Projections_Methodology.pdf.

    Where was the data collected?  Data is collected throughout California. This subset of data includes Napa County.

    When was the data collected? This subset of Napa County data is from Report P-3: Population Projections, California, 2010-2060 (Baseline 2019 Population Projections; Vintage 2020 Release). Sacramento: California. July 2021.

    These 2019 baseline projections incorporate the latest historical population, birth, death, and migration data available as of July 1, 2020. Historical trends from 1990 through 2020 for births, deaths, and migration are examined. County populations by age, sex, and race/ethnicity are projected to 2060.

    Why was the data collected?  The population projections were prepared under the mandate of the California Government Code (Cal. Gov't Code § 13073, 13073.5).

    Where can I learn more about this data? https://dof.ca.gov/Forecasting/Demographics/Projections/ https://dof.ca.gov/wp-content/uploads/sites/352/Forecasting/Demographics/Documents/P3_Dictionary.txt https://dof.ca.gov/wp-content/uploads/sites/352/2023/07/Projections_Methodology.pdf

  9. d

    Marijuana Arrests

    • opendata.dc.gov
    • catalog.data.gov
    • +2more
    Updated Jul 2, 2024
    Share
    FacebookFacebook
    TwitterTwitter
    Email
    Click to copy link
    Link copied
    Close
    Cite
    City of Washington, DC (2024). Marijuana Arrests [Dataset]. https://opendata.dc.gov/datasets/marijuana-arrests
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Jul 2, 2024
    Dataset authored and provided by
    City of Washington, DC
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Area covered
    Description

    The data represents individuals arrested with a marijuana charge, regardless of whether there was a more serious secondary charge. If an arrestee was charged with multiple marijuana charges, the arrest is only counted once under the more serious charge type (Manufacture/Cultivation > Distribution > Possession with Intent to Distribute > Possession > Public Consumption). The category of “Manufacture or Cultivation” was added in the 2019 data and for future years, but is not utilized in prior years.MPD collects race and ethnicity data according to the United States Census Bureau standards (https://www.census.gov/topics/population/race/about.html). Hispanic, which was previously categorized under the Race field prior to August 2015, is now captured under Ethnicity. All records prior to August 2015 have been updated to “Unknown (Race), Hispanic (Ethnicity).” Data on race and ethnicity prior to November 9, 2018 was based on officer observation; on and after November 9, 2018, the data is based on the arrestee’s response.MPD cannot release exact addresses to the general public unless proof of ownership or subpoena is submitted. The GeoX and GeoY values represent the block location (approximately 232 ft. radius) as of the date of the arrest. Due to the Department’s redistricting efforts in 2012 and 2019, data may not be comparable in some years.Arrestee age is calculated based on the number of days between the self-reported or verified date of birth (DOB) of the arrestee and the date of the arrest; DOB data may not be accurate if self-reported or if the arrestee refused to provide it.Due to the sensitive nature of juvenile data and to protect the arrestee’s confidentiality, any arrest records for defendants under the age of 18 have been coded as “NA” for the following fields:• Arrest Hour• CCN• Age• Offense Location Block GeoX/Y• Defendant Race• Defendant Ethnicity• Defendant Sex• Arrest Location Block Address• Arrest Location Block GeoX/YThis data may not match other marijuana data requests that may have included all law enforcement agencies in the District, or only the most serious charge. Figures are subject to change due to record sealing, expungements, and data quality audits.

  10. A

    ‘COVID-19 Vaccination by Town and Race/Ethnicity’ analyzed by Analyst-2

    • analyst-2.ai
    Updated Jan 1, 2022
    Share
    FacebookFacebook
    TwitterTwitter
    Email
    Click to copy link
    Link copied
    Close
    Cite
    Analyst-2 (analyst-2.ai) / Inspirient GmbH (inspirient.com) (2022). ‘COVID-19 Vaccination by Town and Race/Ethnicity’ analyzed by Analyst-2 [Dataset]. https://analyst-2.ai/analysis/data-gov-covid-19-vaccination-by-town-and-race-ethnicity-60f9/304972d1/?iid=004-401&v=presentation
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Jan 1, 2022
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Analyst-2 (analyst-2.ai) / Inspirient GmbH (inspirient.com)
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    Analysis of ‘COVID-19 Vaccination by Town and Race/Ethnicity’ provided by Analyst-2 (analyst-2.ai), based on source dataset retrieved from https://catalog.data.gov/dataset/f61880ad-0a21-4923-acd5-e5efecd5086e on 13 February 2022.

    --- Dataset description provided by original source is as follows ---

    This table shows the number and percent of people that have initiated COVID-19 vaccination and are fully vaccinated by race / ethnicity and town. It includes people of all ages.

    All data in this report are preliminary; data for previous dates will be updated as new reports are received and data errors are corrected.

    A person who has received at least one dose of any vaccine is considered to have initiated vaccination. A person is considered fully vaccinated if they have completed a primary series by receiving 2 doses of the Pfizer or Moderna vaccines or 1 dose of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine. The fully vaccinated are a subset of the number who have received at least one dose.

    Race and ethnicity data may be self-reported or taken from an existing electronic health care record. Reported race and ethnicity information is used to create a single race/ethnicity variable. People with Hispanic ethnicity are classified as Hispanic regardless of reported race. People with a missing ethnicity are classified as non-Hispanic. People with more than one race are classified as multiple race.

    A vaccine coverage percentage cannot be calculated for people classified as NH Other race or NH Unknown race since there are not population size estimates for these groups. Data quality assurance activities suggest that NH Other may represent a missing value. Vaccine coverage estimates in specific race/ethnicity groups may be underestimated as result of the exclusion of records classified as NH Unknown Race or NH Other Race.

    Town of residence is verified by geocoding the reported address and then mapping it a town using municipal boundaries. If an address cannot be geocoded, the reported town is used. Town-level coverage estimates have been capped at 100%. Observed coverage may be greater than 100% for multiple reasons, including census denominator data not including all individuals that currently reside in the town (e.g., part time residents, change in population size since the census) or potential data reporting errors. The population denominators for these town- and age-specific coverage estimates are based on 2014 census estimates. This is the most recent year for which reliable town- and age-specific estimates are available. (https://portal.ct.gov/DPH/Health-Information-Systems--Reporting/Population/Town-Population-with-Demographics). Changes in the size and composition of the population between 2014 and 2021 may results in inaccuracy in vaccine coverage estimates. For example, the size of the Hispanic population may be underestimated in a town given the reported increase in the size of the Hispanic population between the 2010 and 2020 censuses resulting in inflated vaccine coverage estimates.

    The 2014 census data are grouped in 5-year age bands. For vaccine coverage age groupings not consistent with a standard 5-year age band, each age was assumed to be 20% of the total within a 5-year age band. However, given the large deviation from this assumption for Mansfield because of the presence of the University of Connecticut, the age distribution observed in the 2010 census for the age bands 15 to 19 and 20 to 24 was used to estimate the population denominators.

    This table does not included doses administered to CT residents by out-of-state providers or by some Federal entities (including Department of Defense, Department of Correction, Department of Veteran’s Affairs, Indian Health Service) because they are not yet reported to CT WiZ (the CT immunization Information System). It is expected that these data will be added in the future.

    Caution should be used when interpreting coverage estimates for towns with large college/university populations since coverage may be underestimated. In the census, college/university students who live on or just off campus would be counted in the college/university town. However, if a student was vaccinated while studying remotely in his/her hometown, the student may be counted as a vacci

    --- Original source retains full ownership of the source dataset ---

  11. 2022 Economic Census of Island Areas: IA2200SUBJ10 | Island Areas: Tourist...

    • data.census.gov
    Updated Dec 19, 2024
    Share
    FacebookFacebook
    TwitterTwitter
    Email
    Click to copy link
    Link copied
    Close
    Cite
    ECN (2024). 2022 Economic Census of Island Areas: IA2200SUBJ10 | Island Areas: Tourist Incentive Act for Puerto Rico: 2022 (ECNIA Economic Census of Island Areas) [Dataset]. https://data.census.gov/table/ISLANDAREASIND2022.IA2200SUBJ10
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Dec 19, 2024
    Dataset provided by
    United States Census Bureauhttp://census.gov/
    Authors
    ECN
    License

    CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedicationhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Time period covered
    2022
    Description

    Key Table Information.Table Title.Island Areas: Tourist Incentive Act for Puerto Rico: 2022.Table ID.ISLANDAREASIND2022.IA2200SUBJ10.Survey/Program.Economic Census of Island Areas.Year.2022.Dataset.ECNIA Economic Census of Island Areas.Source.U.S. Census Bureau, 2022 Economic Census of Island Areas, Core Statistics.Release Date.2024-12-19.Release Schedule.The Economic Census occurs every five years, in years ending in 2 and 7.2022 Economic Census of Island Areas tables are released on a flow basis from June through December 2024.For more information about economic census planned data product releases, see 2022 Economic Census Release Schedule..Dataset Universe. The dataset universe consists of all establishments that are in operation for at least some part of 2022, are located in Puerto Rico, have paid employees, and are classified in one of eighteen in-scope sectors defined by the 2022 NAICS..Sponsor.U.S. Department of Commerce.Methodology.Data Items and Other Identifying Records.Number of establishmentsSales, value of shipments, or revenue ($1,000)Guestrooms as of December 31Range indicating imputed percentage of total sales, value of shipments, or revenueEach record includes an ENCLAW code, which represents a specific tourist incentive act category.The data are shown for tourist incentive act.Definitions can be found by clicking on the column header in the table or by accessing the Economic Census Glossary..Unit(s) of Observation.The reporting units for the Economic Census of Island Areas are employer establishments. An establishment is generally a single physical location where business is conducted or where services or industrial operations are performed..Geography Coverage.The data are shown for employer establishments and firms that vary by industry:At the Territory level for Puerto RicoFor information about economic census geographies, including changes for 2022, see Geographies..Industry Coverage.The data are shown for Puerto Rico for the 2022 NAICS code 7211.For information about NAICS, see Economic Census Code Lists..Sampling.The Economic Census of Island Areas is a complete enumeration of establishments located in the islands (i.e., all establishments on the sampling frame are included in the sample). Therefore, the accuracy of tabulations is not affected by sampling error..Confidentiality.The Census Bureau has reviewed this data product to ensure appropriate access, use, and disclosure avoidance protection of the confidential source data (Project No. 7504609, Disclosure Review Board (DRB) approval number: CBDRB-FY24-0044).The primary method of disclosure avoidance protection is noise infusion. Under this method, the quantitative data values such as sales or payroll for each establishment are perturbed prior to tabulation by applying a random noise multiplier (i.e., factor). Each establishment is assigned a single noise factor, which is applied to all its quantitative data value. Using this method, most published cell totals are perturbed by at most a few percentage points.To comply with disclosure avoidance guidelines, data rows with fewer than three contributing establishments are not presented. For more information on disclosure avoidance, see Methodology for the 2022 Economic Census- Island Areas..Technical Documentation/Methodology.For detailed information about the methods used to collect data and produce statistics, see Methodology for the 2022 Economic Census- Island Areas.For more information about survey questionnaires, Primary Business Activity/NAICS codes, and NAPCS codes, see Economic Census Technical Documentation..Weights.Because the Economic Census of Island Areas is a complete enumeration, there is no sample weighting..Table Information.FTP Download.https://www2.census.gov/programs-surveys/economic-census/data/2022/sector00.API Information.Economic census data are housed in the Census Bureau Application Programming Interface (API)..Symbols.D - Withheld to avoid disclosing data for individual companies; data are included in higher level totalsN - Not available or not comparableS - Estimate does not meet publication standards because of high sampling variability, poor response quality, or other concerns about the estimate quality. Unpublished estimates derived from this table by subtraction are subject to these same limitations and should not be attributed to the U.S. Census Bureau. For a description of publication standards and the total quantity response rate, see link to program methodology page.X - Not applicableA - Relative standard error of 100% or morer - Reviseds - Relative standard error exceeds 40%For a complete list of symbols, see Economic Census Data Dictionary..Data-Specific Notes.Data users who create their own estimates using data from this file should cite the U.S. Census Bureau as the source of the original data only.For more information about the survey, see Economic Census- Island Areas..Additional Information.Contact Information.U.S. Census BureauFor genera...

  12. c

    Connecticut Nurses Census 1917

    • s.cnmilf.com
    • data.ct.gov
    • +1more
    Updated Mar 29, 2025
    Share
    FacebookFacebook
    TwitterTwitter
    Email
    Click to copy link
    Link copied
    Close
    Cite
    data.ct.gov (2025). Connecticut Nurses Census 1917 [Dataset]. https://s.cnmilf.com/user74170196/https/catalog.data.gov/dataset/connecticut-nurses-census-1917
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Mar 29, 2025
    Dataset provided by
    data.ct.gov
    Area covered
    Connecticut
    Description

    Connecticut Nurses Census 1917 The Connecticut Nurses Census is a part of State Archives Record Group 029: Records of the Military Census Department. The census forms may give basic details such as birthplace, age, marital status, maiden name, and current residence, as well as more specific information such as the name of the nursing school attended, medical specialty, and year of licensure. This census included the registration of both female and male nurses. This index includes the name, birthplace, age, current residence, form number and box number. If a field is left blank, it is because the person who submitted the form did not answer that question (e.g. age, anybody!) People may request a copy of a census form by contacting us by telephone (860) 757-6580 or email. Please include the name of the individual and form number.

  13. i

    Mlomp HDSS INDEPTH Core Dataset 1985 - 2014 (Release 2017) - Senegal

    • datacatalog.ihsn.org
    • catalog.ihsn.org
    Updated Sep 19, 2018
    Share
    FacebookFacebook
    TwitterTwitter
    Email
    Click to copy link
    Link copied
    Close
    Cite
    Laurence Fleury (2018). Mlomp HDSS INDEPTH Core Dataset 1985 - 2014 (Release 2017) - Senegal [Dataset]. https://datacatalog.ihsn.org/catalog/7294
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Sep 19, 2018
    Dataset provided by
    El-Hadji Ciré Konko Bâ
    Laurence Fleury
    Cheikh Sokhna
    Valérie Delaunay
    Gilles Pison
    Time period covered
    1985 - 2014
    Area covered
    Senegal
    Description

    Abstract

    In 1985 the population and health observatory was established at Mlomp, in the region of Ziguinchor, in southern Senegal (see map). The objective was to complement the two rural population observatories then existing in the country, Bandafassi, in the south-east, and Niakhar, in the centre-west, with a third observatory in a region - the south-west of the country (Casamance) - whose history, ethnic composition and economic situation were quite different from those of the regions where the first two observatories were located. It was expected that measuring the demographic levels and trends on those three sites would provide better coverage of the demographic and epidemiological diversity of the country.

    Following a population census in 1984-1985, demographic events and causes of death have been monitored yearly. During the initial census, all women were interviewed concerning the birth and survival of their children. Since 1985, yearly censuses, usually conducted in January-February, have been recording demographic data, including all births, deaths, and migrations. The completeness and accuracy of dates of birth and death are cross-checked against those of registers of the local maternity ward (_95% of all births) and dispensary (all deaths are recorded, including those occurring outside the area), respectively. The study area comprises 11 villages with approximately 8000 inhabitants, mostly Diola. Mlomp is located in the Department of Oussouye, Region of Ziguinchor (Casamance), 500 km south of Dakar.

    On 1 January 2000 the Mlomp area included a population of 7,591 residents living in 11 villages. The population density was 108 people per square kilometre. The population belongs to the Diola ethnic group, and the religion is predominantly animist, with a large minority of Christians and a few Muslims. Though low, the educational level - in 2000, 55% of women aged 15-49 had been to school (for at least one year) - is definitely higher than at Bandafassi. The population also benefits from much better health infrastructure and programmes. Since 1961, the area under study has been equipped with a private health centre run by French Catholic nurses and, since 1968, a village maternity centre where most women give birth. The vast majority of the children are totally immunized and involved in a growth-monitoring programme (Pison et al.,1993; Pison et al., 2001).

    Geographic coverage

    The Mlomp DSS site, about 500 km from the capital, Dakar, in Senegal, lies between latitudes 12°36' and 12°32'N and longitudes 16°33' and 16°37'E, at an altitude ranging from 0 to 20 m above sea level. It is in the region of Ziguinchor, Département of Oussouye (Casamance), in southwest Senegal. It is locates 50 km west of the city of Ziguinchor and 25 kms north of the border with Guinea Bissau. It covers about half the Arrondissement of Loudia-Ouolof. The Mlomp DSS site is about 11 km × 7 km and has an area of 70 km2. Villages are households grouped in a circle with a 3-km diameter and surrounded by lands that are flooded during the rainy season and cultivated for rice. There is still no electricity.

    Analysis unit

    Individual

    Universe

    At the census, a person was considered a member of the compound if the head of the compound declared it to be so. This definition was broad and resulted in a de jure population under study. Thereafter, a criterion was used to decide whether and when a person was to be excluded or included in the population.

    A person was considered to exit from the study population through either death or emigration. Part of the population of Mlomp engages in seasonal migration, with seasonal migrants sometimes remaining 1 or 2 years outside the area before returning. A person who is absent for two successive yearly rounds, without returning in between, is regarded as having emigrated and no longer resident in the study population at the date of the second round. This definition results in the inclusion of some vital events that occur outside the study area. Some births, for example, occur to women classified in the study population but physically absent at the time of delivery, and these births are registered and included in the calculation of rates, although information on them is less accurate. Special exit criteria apply to babies born outside the study area: they are considered emigrants on the same date as their mother.

    A new person enters the study population either through birth to a woman of the study population or through immigration. Information on immigrants is collected when the list of compounds of a village is checked ("Are there new compounds or new families who settled since the last visit?") or when the list of members of a compound is checked ("Are there new persons in the compound since the last visit?"). Some immigrants are villagers who left the area several years before and were excluded from the study population. Information is collected to determine in which compound they were previously registered, to match the new and old information.

    Information is routinely collected on movements from one compound to another within the study area. Some categories of the population, such as older widows or orphans, frequently move for short periods of time and live in between several compounds, and they may be considered members of these compounds or of none. As a consequence, their movements are not always declared.

    Kind of data

    Event history data

    Frequency of data collection

    One round of data collection took place annually, except in 1987 and 2008.

    Sampling procedure

    No samplaing is done

    Sampling deviation

    None

    Mode of data collection

    Proxy Respondent [proxy]

    Research instrument

    List of questionnaires: - Household book (used to register informations needed to define outmigrations) - Delivery questionnaire (used to register information of dispensaire ol mlomp) - New household questionnaire - New member questionnaire - Marriage and divorce questionnaire - Birth and marital histories questionnaire (for a new member) - Death questionnaire (used to register the date of death)

    Cleaning operations

    On data entry data consistency and plausibility were checked by 455 data validation rules at database level. If data validaton failure was due to a data collection error, the questionnaire was referred back to the field for revisit and correction. If the error was due to data inconsistencies that could not be directly traced to a data collection error, the record was referred to the data quality team under the supervision of the senior database scientist. This could request further field level investigation by a team of trackers or could correct the inconsistency directly at database level.

    No imputations were done on the resulting micro data set, except for:

    a. If an out-migration (OMG) event is followed by a homestead entry event (ENT) and the gap between OMG event and ENT event is greater than 180 days, the ENT event was changed to an in-migration event (IMG). b. If an out-migration (OMG) event is followed by a homestead entry event (ENT) and the gap between OMG event and ENT event is less than 180 days, the OMG event was changed to an homestead exit event (EXT) and the ENT event date changed to the day following the original OMG event. c. If a homestead exit event (EXT) is followed by an in-migration event (IMG) and the gap between the EXT event and the IMG event is greater than 180 days, the EXT event was changed to an out-migration event (OMG). d. If a homestead exit event (EXT) is followed by an in-migration event (IMG) and the gap between the EXT event and the IMG event is less than 180 days, the IMG event was changed to an homestead entry event (ENT) with a date equal to the day following the EXT event. e. If the last recorded event for an individual is homestead exit (EXT) and this event is more than 180 days prior to the end of the surveillance period, then the EXT event is changed to an out-migration event (OMG)

    In the case of the village that was added (enumerated) in 2006, some individuals may have outmigrated from the original surveillance area and setlled in the the new village prior to the first enumeration. Where the records of such individuals have been linked, and indivdiual can legitmately have and outmigration event (OMG) forllowed by and enumeration event (ENU). In a few cases a homestead exit event (EXT) was followed by an enumeration event in these cases. In these instances the EXT events were changed to an out-migration event (OMG).

    Response rate

    On an average the response rate is about 99% over the years for each round.

    Sampling error estimates

    Not applicable

    Data appraisal

    CenterId Metric Table QMetric Illegal Legal Total Metric Rundate
    SN012 MicroDataCleaned Starts 18756 2017-05-19 00:00
    SN012 MicroDataCleaned Transitions 0 45136 45136 0 2017-05-19 00:00
    SN012 MicroDataCleaned Ends 18756 2017-05-19 00:00
    SN012 MicroDataCleaned SexValues 38 45098 45136 0 2017-05-19 00:00
    SN012 MicroDataCleaned DoBValues 204 44932 45136 0 2017-05-19 00:00

  14. 2022 Economic Census of Island Areas: IA2200SUBJ07 | Island Areas: Summary...

    • data.census.gov
    Updated Dec 19, 2024
    + more versions
    Share
    FacebookFacebook
    TwitterTwitter
    Email
    Click to copy link
    Link copied
    Close
    Cite
    ECN (2024). 2022 Economic Census of Island Areas: IA2200SUBJ07 | Island Areas: Summary Statistics by Mall or Shopping Center Location for Planning Regions and Municipios for Puerto Rico: 2022 (ECNIA Economic Census of Island Areas) [Dataset]. https://data.census.gov/all/tables?q=SORAYA%20PLANNING%20DESIGN
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Dec 19, 2024
    Dataset provided by
    United States Census Bureauhttp://census.gov/
    Authors
    ECN
    License

    CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedicationhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Time period covered
    2022
    Description

    Key Table Information.Table Title.Island Areas: Summary Statistics by Mall or Shopping Center Location for Planning Regions and Municipios for Puerto Rico: 2022.Table ID.ISLANDAREASIND2022.IA2200SUBJ07.Survey/Program.Economic Census of Island Areas.Year.2022.Dataset.ECNIA Economic Census of Island Areas.Source.U.S. Census Bureau, 2022 Economic Census of Island Areas, Core Statistics.Release Date.2024-12-19.Release Schedule.The Economic Census occurs every five years, in years ending in 2 and 7.2022 Economic Census of Island Areas tables are released on a flow basis from June through December 2024.For more information about economic census planned data product releases, see 2022 Economic Census Release Schedule..Dataset Universe. The dataset universe consists of all establishments that are in operation for at least some part of 2022, are located in Puerto Rico, have paid employees, and are classified in one of eighteen in-scope sectors defined by the 2022 NAICS..Sponsor.U.S. Department of Commerce.Methodology.Data Items and Other Identifying Records.Number of establishmentsSales, value of establishments, or revenue ($1,000)Annual payroll ($1,000)First-quarter payroll ($1,000)Number of employeesRange indicating imputed percentage of total sales, value of shipments, or revenueRange indicating imputed percentage of total annual payrollRange indicating imputed percentage of total employeesEach record includes a SHOPCTR code, which represents a specific mall or shopping center location category.The data are shown by mall or shopping center location.Definitions can be found by clicking on the column header in the table or by accessing the Economic Census Glossary..Unit(s) of Observation.The reporting units for the Economic Census of Island Areas are employer establishments. An establishment is generally a single physical location where business is conducted or where services or industrial operations are performed..Geography Coverage.The data are shown for employer establishments and firms that vary by industry:At the Territory, Planning Region, and Municipio level for Puerto RicoFor information about economic census geographies, including changes for 2022, see Geographies..Industry Coverage.The data are shown at the 2- through 3-digit 2022 NAICS code levels for selected economic census sectors and geographies.For information about NAICS, see Economic Census Code Lists..Sampling.The Economic Census of Island Areas is a complete enumeration of establishments located in the islands (i.e., all establishments on the sampling frame are included in the sample). Therefore, the accuracy of tabulations is not affected by sampling error..Confidentiality.The Census Bureau has reviewed this data product to ensure appropriate access, use, and disclosure avoidance protection of the confidential source data (Project No. 7504609, Disclosure Review Board (DRB) approval number: CBDRB-FY24-0044).The primary method of disclosure avoidance protection is noise infusion. Under this method, the quantitative data values such as sales or payroll for each establishment are perturbed prior to tabulation by applying a random noise multiplier (i.e., factor). Each establishment is assigned a single noise factor, which is applied to all its quantitative data value. Using this method, most published cell totals are perturbed by at most a few percentage points.To comply with disclosure avoidance guidelines, data rows with fewer than three contributing establishments are not presented. For more information on disclosure avoidance, see Methodology for the 2022 Economic Census- Island Areas..Technical Documentation/Methodology.For detailed information about the methods used to collect data and produce statistics, see Methodology for the 2022 Economic Census- Island Areas.For more information about survey questionnaires, Primary Business Activity/NAICS codes, and NAPCS codes, see Economic Census Technical Documentation..Weights.Because the Economic Census of Island Areas is a complete enumeration, there is no sample weighting..Table Information.FTP Download.https://www2.census.gov/programs-surveys/economic-census/data/2022/sector00.API Information.Economic census data are housed in the Census Bureau Application Programming Interface (API)..Symbols.D - Withheld to avoid disclosing data for individual companies; data are included in higher level totalsN - Not available or not comparableS - Estimate does not meet publication standards because of high sampling variability, poor response quality, or other concerns about the estimate quality. Unpublished estimates derived from this table by subtraction are subject to these same limitations and should not be attributed to the U.S. Census Bureau. For a description of publication standards and the total quantity response rate, see link to program methodology page.X - Not applicableA - Relative standard error of 100% or morer - Reviseds - Relative standard error exceeds 40%For a complete list of symbols, see ...

  15. i

    Ouagadougou HDSS INDEPTH Core Dataset 2009 - 2014 (Release 2017) - Burkina...

    • catalog.ihsn.org
    Updated Mar 29, 2019
    Share
    FacebookFacebook
    TwitterTwitter
    Email
    Click to copy link
    Link copied
    Close
    Cite
    Abdramane Soura (2019). Ouagadougou HDSS INDEPTH Core Dataset 2009 - 2014 (Release 2017) - Burkina Faso [Dataset]. https://catalog.ihsn.org/catalog/study/BFA_2009-2014_INDEPTH-OHDSS_v01_M
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Mar 29, 2019
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Abdramane Soura
    Time period covered
    2009 - 2014
    Area covered
    Burkina Faso
    Description

    Abstract

    The Ouagadougou Health and Demographic Surveillance System (Ouagadougou HDSS), located in five neighborhoods at the northern periphery of the capital of Burkina Faso, was established in 2008. Data on vital events (births, deaths, unions, migration events) are collected during household visits that have taken place every 10 months.

    The areas were selected to contrast informal neighborhoods (40,000 residents) with formal areas (40,000 residents), with the aims of understanding the problems of the urban poor, and testing innovative programs that promote the well-being of this population. People living in informal areas tend to be marginalized in several ways: they are younger, poorer, less educated, farther from public services and more often migrants. Half of the residents live in the Sanitary District of Kossodo and the other half in the District of Sig-Nonghin.

    The Ouaga HDSS has been used to study health inequalities, conduct a surveillance of typhoid fever, measure water quality in informal areas, study the link between fertility and school investments, test a non-governmental organization (NGO)-led program of poverty alleviation and test a community-led targeting of the poor eligible for benefits in the urban context. Key informants help maintain a good rapport with the community.

    The areas researchers follow consist of 55 census tracks divided into 494 blocks. Researchers mapped all the census tracks and blocks using fieldworkers with handheld global positioning system (GPS) receivers and ArcGIS. During a first census (October 2008 to March 2009), the demographic surveillance system was explained to every head of household and a consent form was signed; during subsequent censuses, new households were enrolled in the same way.

    Geographic coverage

    Ouagadougou is the capital city of Burkina Faso and lies at the centre of this country, located in the middle of West Africa (128 North of the Equator and 18 West of the Prime Meridian).

    Analysis unit

    Individual

    Universe

    Resident household members of households resident within the demographic surveillance area. Inmigrants (visitors) are defined by intention to become resident, but actual residence episodes of less than six months (180 days) are censored. Outmigrants are defined by intention to become resident elsewhere, but actual periods of non-residence less than six months (180 days) are censored. Children born to resident women are considered resident by default, irrespective of actual place of birth. The dataset contains the events of all individuals ever residents during the study period (03 Oct. 2009 to 31 Dec. 2014).

    Kind of data

    Event history data

    Frequency of data collection

    This dataset contains rounds 0 to 7 of demographic surveillance data covering the period from 07 Oct. 2008 to 31 December 2014.

    Sampling procedure

    This dataset is not based on a sample, it contains information from the complete demographic surveillance area of Ouagadougou in Burkina Faso.

    Reponse units (households) by Round: Round Households
    2008 4941
    2009 19159 2010 21168
    2011 12548 2012 24174 2013 22326

    Sampling deviation

    None

    Mode of data collection

    Proxy Respondent [proxy]

    Research instrument

    List of questionnaires:

    Collective Housing Unit (UCH) Survey Form - Used to register characteristics of the house - Use to register Sanitation installations - All registered house as at previous round are uploaded behind the PDA or tablet.

    Household registration (HHR) or update (HHU) Form - Used to register characteristics of the HH - Used to update information about the composition of the household - All registered households as at previous rounds are uploaded behind the PDA or tablet.

    Household Membership Registration (HMR) or update (HMU) - Used to link individuals to households. - Used to update information about the household memberships and member status observations - All member status observations as at previous rounds are uploaded behind the PDA or tablet.

    Presences registration form (PDR) - Used to uniquely identify the presence of each individual in the household and to identify the new individual in the household - Mainly to ensure members with multiple household memberships are appropriately captured - All presences observations as at previous rounds are uploaded behind the PDA or tablet.

    Visitor registration form (VDR) - Used register the characteristics of the new individual in the household - Used to capt the internal migration - Use matching form to facilitate pairing migration

    Out Migration notification form (MGN) - Used to record change in the status of residency of individuals or households - Migrants are tracked and updated in the database

    Pregnancy history form (PGH) & pregnancy outcome notification form (PON) - Records details of pregnancies and their outcomes - Only if woman is a new member - Only if woman has never completed WHL or WGH - All member pregnancy without pregnancy outcome as at previous rounds are uploaded behind the PDA or tablet.

    Death notification form (DTN) - Records all deaths that have recently occurred - Includes information about time, place, circumstances and possible cause of death

    Updated Basic information Form (UBIF) - Use to change the individual basic information

    Health questionnaire (adults, women, child, elder) - Family planning - Chronic illnesses - Violence and accident - Mental health - Nutrition, alcohol, tobacco - Access to health services - Anthropometric measures - Physical limitations - Self-rated health - Food security

    Variability of climate and water accessibility - accessibility to water - child health outcomes - gender outcomes - data on rainfall, temperatures, water quality

    Cleaning operations

    The data collection system is composed by two databases: - A temporary database, which contains data collected and transferred each day during the round. - A reference database, which contains all data of Ouagadougou Health and Demographic Surveillance System, in which is transferred the data of the temporary database to the end of each round. The temporary database is emptied at the end of the round for a new round.

    The data processing takes place in two ways:

    1) When collecting data with PDAs or tablets and theirs transfers by Wi-Fi, data consistency and plausibility are controlled by verification rules in the mobile application and in the database. In addition to these verifications, the data from the temporary database undergo validation. This validation is performed each week and produces a validation report for the data collection team. After the validation, if the error is due to an error in the data collection, the field worker equipped with his PDA or tablet go back to the field to revisit and correct this error. At the end of this correction, the field worker makes again the transfer of data through the wireless access points on the server. If the error is due to data inconsistencies that might not be directly related to an error in data collection, the case is remanded to the scientific team of the main database that could resolve the inconsistency directly in the database or could with supervisors perform a thorough investigation in order to correct the error.

    2) At the end of the round, the data from the temporary database are automatically transferred into the reference database by a transfer program. After the success of this transfer, further validation is performed on the data in the database to ensure data consistency and plausibility. This still produces a validation report for the data collection team. And the same process of error correction is taken.

    Response rate

    Household response rates are as follows (assuming that if a household has not responded for 2 years following the last recorded visit to that household, that the household is lost to follow-up and no longer part of the response rate denominator):

    Year Response Rate
    2008 100%
    2009 100%
    2010 100%
    2011 98% 2012 100% 2013 95%

    Sampling error estimates

    Not applicable

    Data appraisal

    CentreId MetricTable QMetric Illegal Legal Total Metric RunDate BF041 MicroDataCleaned Starts 151624 2017-05-16 13:36
    BF041 MicroDataCleaned Transitions 0 314778 314778 0 2017-05-16 13:36
    BF041 MicroDataCleaned Ends 151624 2017-05-16 13:36
    BF041 MicroDataCleaned SexValues 314778 2017-05-16 13:36
    BF041 MicroDataCleaned DoBValues 314778 2017-05-16 13:36

  16. D

    ARCHIVED: COVID-19 Cases by Vaccination Status Over Time

    • data.sfgov.org
    • healthdata.gov
    application/rdfxml +5
    Updated Jun 28, 2023
    + more versions
    Share
    FacebookFacebook
    TwitterTwitter
    Email
    Click to copy link
    Link copied
    Close
    Cite
    (2023). ARCHIVED: COVID-19 Cases by Vaccination Status Over Time [Dataset]. https://data.sfgov.org/Health-and-Social-Services/ARCHIVED-COVID-19-Cases-by-Vaccination-Status-Over/gqw3-444p
    Explore at:
    csv, tsv, json, application/rssxml, xml, application/rdfxmlAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Jun 28, 2023
    License

    ODC Public Domain Dedication and Licence (PDDL) v1.0http://www.opendatacommons.org/licenses/pddl/1.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    On 6/28/2023, data on cases by vaccination status will be archived and will no longer update.

    A. SUMMARY This dataset represents San Francisco COVID-19 positive confirmed cases by vaccination status over time, starting January 1, 2021. Cases are included on the date the positive test was collected (the specimen collection date). Cases are counted in three categories: (1) all cases; (2) unvaccinated cases; and (3) completed primary series cases.

    1. All cases: Includes cases among all San Francisco residents regardless of vaccination status.

    2. Unvaccinated cases: Cases are considered unvaccinated if their positive COVID-19 test was before receiving any vaccine. Cases that are not matched to a COVID-19 vaccination record are considered unvaccinated.

    3. Completed primary series cases: Cases are considered completed primary series if their positive COVID-19 test was 14 days or more after they received their 2nd dose in a 2-dose COVID-19 series or the single dose of a 1-dose vaccine. These are also called “breakthrough cases.”

    On September 12, 2021, a new case definition of COVID-19 was introduced that includes criteria for enumerating new infections after previous probable or confirmed infections (also known as reinfections). A reinfection is defined as a confirmed positive PCR lab test more than 90 days after a positive PCR or antigen test. The first reinfection case was identified on December 7, 2021.

    Data is lagged by eight days, meaning the most recent specimen collection date included is eight days prior to today. All data updates daily as more information becomes available.

    B. HOW THE DATASET IS CREATED Case information is based on confirmed positive laboratory tests reported to the City. The City then completes quality assurance and other data verification processes. Vaccination data comes from the California Immunization Registry (CAIR2). The California Department of Public Health runs CAIR2. Individual-level case and vaccination data are matched to identify cases by vaccination status in this dataset. Case records are matched to vaccine records using first name, last name, date of birth, phone number, and email address.

    We include vaccination records from all nine Bay Area counties in order to improve matching rates. This allows us to identify breakthrough cases among people who moved to the City from other Bay Area counties after completing their vaccine series. Only cases among San Francisco residents are included.

    C. UPDATE PROCESS Updates automatically at 08:00 AM Pacific Time each day.

    D. HOW TO USE THIS DATASET Total San Francisco population estimates can be found in a view based on the San Francisco Population and Demographic Census dataset. These population estimates are from the 2016-2020 5-year American Community Survey (ACS). To identify total San Francisco population estimates, filter the view on “demographic_category_label” = “all ages”.

    Population estimates by vaccination status are derived from our publicly reported vaccination counts, which can be found at COVID-19 Vaccinations Given to SF Residents Over Time.

    The dataset includes new cases, 7-day average new cases, new case rates, 7-day average new case rates, percent of total cases, and 7-day average percent of total cases for each vaccination category.

    New cases are the count of cases where the positive tests were collected on that specific specimen collection date. The 7-day rolling average shows the trend in new cases. The rolling average is calculated by averaging the new cases for a particular day with the prior 6 days.

    New case rates are the count of new cases per 100,000 residents in each vaccination status group. The 7-day rolling average shows the trend in case rates. The rolling average is calculated by averaging the case rate for a particular day with the prior six days. Percent of total new cases shows the percent of all cases on each day that were among a particular vaccination status.

    Here is more information on how each case rate is calculated:

    1. The case rate for all cases is equal to the number of new cases among all residents divided by the estimated total resident population.

    2. Unvaccinated case rates are equal to the number of new cases among unvaccinated residents divided by the estimated number of unvaccinated residents. The estimated number of unvaccinated residents is calculated by subtracting the number of residents that have received at least one dose of a vaccine from the total estimated resident population.

    3. Completed primary series case rates are equal to the number of new cases among completed primary series residents divided by the estimated number of completed primary series residents. The estimated number of completed primary series residents is calculated by taking the number of residents who have completed their primary series over time and adding a 14-day delay to the “date_administered” column, to align with the definition of “Completed primary series cases” above.

    E. CHANGE LOG

    • 6/28/2023 - data on cases by vaccination status are no longer being updated. This data is currently through 6/20/2023 (as of 6/28/2023) and will not include any new data after this date.
    • 4/6/2023 - the State implemented system updates to improve the integrity of historical data.
    • 2/21/2023 - system updates to improve reliability and accuracy of cases data were implemented.
    • 1/31/2023 - updated “sf_population” column to reflect the 2020 Census Bureau American Community Survey (ACS) San Francisco Population estimates.
    • 1/31/2023 - renamed column “last_updated_at” to “data_as_of”.
    • 1/22/2022 - system updates to improve timeliness and accuracy of cases and deaths data were implemented.
    • 7/15/2022 - reinfections added to cases dataset. See section SUMMARY for more information on how reinfections are identified.
    • 7/15/2022 - references to “fully vaccinated” replaced with “completed primary series” in column “vaccination_status".
    • 7/15/2022 - rows with “partially vaccinated” in column “vaccination_status” removed from dataset.

  17. Population and Housing Census 2009 - Vanuatu

    • microdata.pacificdata.org
    Updated Aug 18, 2013
    + more versions
    Share
    FacebookFacebook
    TwitterTwitter
    Email
    Click to copy link
    Link copied
    Close
    Cite
    Vanuatu National Statistics Office (2013). Population and Housing Census 2009 - Vanuatu [Dataset]. https://microdata.pacificdata.org/index.php/catalog/14
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Aug 18, 2013
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Vanuatu National Statistics Office
    Time period covered
    2009
    Area covered
    Vanuatu
    Description

    Abstract

    The key objective of every census is to count every person (man, woman, child) resident in the country on census night, and also collect information on assorted demographic (sex, age, marital status, citizenship) and socio-economic (education/qualifications; labour force and economic activity) information, as well as data pertinent to household and housing characteristics. This count provides a complete picture of the population make-up in each village and town, of each island and region, thus allowing for an assessment of demographic change over time.

    With Vanuatu, as many of her Pacific island neighbours increasingly embracing a culture of informed, or evidence-based policy development and decision-making, national census databases, and the possibility to extract complex cross-tabulations as well as a host of important sub-regional and small-area relevant information, are essential to feed a growing demand for data and information in both public and private sectors.

    Educational, health and manpower planning, for example, including assessments of future demands for staffing, facilities, and programmed budgets, would not be possible without periodic censuses, and Government efforts to monitor development progress, such as in the context of its Millennium Development Goal (MDG) commitments, would also suffer greatly, if not be outright impossible, without reliable data provided by regular national population counts and updates.

    While regular national-level surveys, such as Household Income and Expenditure Surveys, Labour force surveys, agriculture surveys and demographic and health surveys - to name but just a few - provide important data and information across specific sectors, these surveys could not be sustained or managed without a national sampling frame (which a census data provides). And the calculation and measurement of all population-based development indicators, such as most MDG indicators, would not be possible without up-to-date population statistics, which usually come from a census or from projections and estimates that are based on census data.

    With most of this information now already 9 years old (and thus quite outdated), and in the absence of reliable population-register type databases, such as those provided from well-functional civil registration (births and deaths) and migration-recording systems, the 2009 Vanuatu census of population and housing, will provide much needed demographic, social and economic statistics that are essential for policy development, national development planning, and the regular monitoring of development progress.

    Apart from achieving its general aims and objectives in delivering updated population, social and economic statistics, the 2009 census also represented a major national capacity building exercise, with most Vanuatu National Statistics Office (VNSO) staff who were involved with the census, having no prior census experience. Having been carefully planned and resourced, all 2009 census activities have potentially provided very useful (and desired) on-the-job-training for VNSO staff, right across the spectrum of professional rank and responsibilities. It also provided for short-term overseas training and professional attachments (at SPC or ABS, or elsewhere) for a limited number of professional staff, who subsequently mentored other staff in the Vanuatu National Statistics Office (VNSO).

    With some key senior VNSO members involved with the 1999 census, provides a wealth of experience that was available in-house and not to mention the ongoing surveys such HIES and Agriculture Census that the office has conducted before the census proper. The VNSO has also professional officers who have qualified in the fields of Population and Demography who had manned the project, and with this type of resources, we managed to conduct yet another successful project of the 2009 census.

    While some short-term census advisory missions were fielded from SPC Demography/ Population programme staff, standard SPC technical assistance policy arrangements could not cater for long-term, or repeated in-country assignments. However, other relevant donors were invited for the longer-term attachments of TA expertise to the VNSO.

    Geographic coverage

    The 2009 Population and Housing Census Geographical Coverage included:

    • National (Vanuatu)
    • Provinces (Torba, Sanma, Penama, Malampa, Shefa, tafea)
    • Inhabited Islands (From Hiu, Torres Islands to Aneityum, Southern Islands)
    • Enumeration Areas (EA assigned to each enumerator)
    • Villages / Towns

    Analysis unit

    The Unit Analysis of the 2009 Population and Housing Census included: - Household - Person (Population)

    Universe

    The census cover all households and individuals throughout Vanuatu.

    Kind of data

    Census/enumeration data [cen]

    Sampling procedure

    Not Applicable

    Mode of data collection

    Face-to-face [f2f]

    Research instrument

    The questionnaire basically has 5 sections; the geographical identifiers, the general population questions and education, labour force questions, the women and fertility questions and the housing questions.

    The geographical identifiers contains the Village name, GPS code, EA number, household number and the Enumerator ID The Person questions contain the person demographics including the education level and labour force status. A section on fertility for women in the reproductive age is also included. all have been guided by 'skips' to guide the flow of questions asked

    Household questions contains the basic description of the house materials, tenure, access to water and sanitation, energy, durables, use of treated mosquito nest and internet access.

    Cleaning operations

    In the Census proper, the Optical Character Recognition (OCR) system (ReadSoft Application System) was used to capture information from the completed forms. The captured data were then exported to MS Access database system for further editing and cleaning before the final data is transferred to CSPro for more editing and quality checks before the data was finalised. All system files and data files were stored in the server under 2009PopCensus folder. Three temporary data operators were hired to do the job, under the supervision of Rara Soro, the system analyst for VNSO. No data was stored in work stations, because all data were directly written to the DATA folder in the server.

    Range checks and basic checks (online edits) were built in the manual data entry system, while the complex edits were written in a separate batch edit program. If the system encounter and error during data entry, an error message will be displayed and the data operator cannot proceed unless the error displayed is fixed. e.g Males + Females = Total Persons. Please re-enter. It was strongly recommended to the data operators not to make up answers but consult the supervisor if he/she cannot fix it. Listed below are the checks that were built into the data entry system.

    01 Person 1 must be the head of household 02 Sex against relationship 03 Age against date of birth 04 Marital status - Married people should be age 15+ 05 Spouse should be married 06 P9, P10, P11 against village enumerated 07 Never been to school but can use internet - Is this possible 08 Check for multiple head or spouse in the household 09 Husband and wife of same sex 10 Total persons match total people in personal form 11 Total children born and live in household (F2a) against total persons total 12 Age difference of head and child is less than 13 13 Total children born (F4) against total alive(F2) + total died(F3)

    A separate batch edit program was developed for further data cleaning. All online edits were also re-written in this program to make sure that all errors flagged out during data entry were fixed. Some of the errors detected are not really errors, but still requires double checking, and if the answer recorded is the correct answer, don't change it. The batch edit was performed on each batch, and also on the concatenated batch. Below is the summary list of errors generated from manual data entry data before batch editing.

    MDE Error message summary
    Age does not match date of birth 272 Total children born and living in household (F2a) > total in 1
    Attend school full-time in P12 but also working 16
    Too young for highest education recorded 14
    Highest ed completed do not match with grade currently attending 80

    Age had the highest errors rate, and this is due to an error in the logic statement, otherwise all ages that do not match their date of birth are corrected during data entry.

    The Data capturing (Scanning) and Editing process took about 6 months to be completed but then more checks were made after that to finalise the dataset before publishing the results.

    During re-coding of zero's and blanks, a couple of batch edit statement written in the batch edit program were wrong, and it created errors in the scanned data. The batch edit was suppose to recode only those people that didn't answer questions P19, P23 - P25, but instead it recoded valid codes as well to blanks. This was only picked up when tables were generated and numbers were found to be so much different in manual data entry and scanned data. Another batch edit program was developed to recode and fix this problem.

    Sampling error estimates

    Not Applicable

    Data appraisal

    Household characteristics and basic demographic variables for the census data was used in comparision with the 1999 census data to determine the accuracy of the pilot data. Some of the key indicators used for comparision are the

  18. d

    Stop Incidents Field Contact 2012 to 2017

    • opendata.dc.gov
    • catalog.data.gov
    • +3more
    Updated May 24, 2024
    + more versions
    Share
    FacebookFacebook
    TwitterTwitter
    Email
    Click to copy link
    Link copied
    Close
    Cite
    City of Washington, DC (2024). Stop Incidents Field Contact 2012 to 2017 [Dataset]. https://opendata.dc.gov/datasets/1a18f60a139c4242ad66e6ee8201a2ef
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    May 24, 2024
    Dataset authored and provided by
    City of Washington, DC
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Area covered
    Description

    When a non-forcible stop is conducted, MPD officers may document it on a field contact report instead of an incident report. A field contact report is also used to record general contact with a citizen. This dataset only captures the field contact type where the officer has indicated it is a stop by classifying it as a “pedestrian stop”, “vehicle stop”, or “bicycle stop.”A “stop” is a temporary detention of a person for the purpose of determining whether probable cause exists to arrest a person. A “frisk” is a limited protective search on a person to determine the presence of concealed weapons and/or dangerous instruments.The Metropolitan Police Department (MPD) upgraded its records management system in 2012 and 2015. During each implementation, data collection processes may have changed. For example:- The date field for field contact reports prior to January 2, 2012 was not migrated to the current record management system. As a result, tens of thousands of records carry a date of January 1, 2012. Therefore, MPD is unable to provide field contact data prior to January 2, 2012.- With the implementation of the most recent RMS in 2015, MPD began collecting race and ethnicity data according to the United States Census Bureau standards (https://www.census.gov/topics/population/race/about.html). As a result, Hispanic, which was previously categorized under the Race field, is currently captured under Ethnicity. Race and ethnicity data are based on officer observation, which may or may not be accurate. Individuals are not required to provide their date of birth and/or age; therefore, there may be blank and/or unknown ages.https://mpdc.dc.gov/stopdata

  19. Jurisdictional Units Public

    • hub.arcgis.com
    • data-nifc.opendata.arcgis.com
    • +3more
    Updated Jan 12, 2025
    Share
    FacebookFacebook
    TwitterTwitter
    Email
    Click to copy link
    Link copied
    Close
    Cite
    National Interagency Fire Center (2025). Jurisdictional Units Public [Dataset]. https://hub.arcgis.com/datasets/4107b5d1debf4305ba00e929b7e5971a
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Jan 12, 2025
    Dataset authored and provided by
    National Interagency Fire Centerhttps://www.nifc.gov/
    Area covered
    Description

    OverviewThe Jurisdictional Units dataset outlines wildland fire jurisdictional boundaries for federal, state, and local government entities on a national scale and is used within multiple wildland fire systems including the Wildland Fire Decision Support System (WFDSS), the Interior Fuels and Post-Fire Reporting System (IFPRS), the Interagency Fuels Treatment Decision Support System (IFTDSS), the Interagency Fire Occurrence Reporting Modules (InFORM), the Interagency Reporting of Wildland Fire Information System (IRWIN), and the Wildland Computer-Aided Dispatch Enterprise System (WildCAD-E).In this dataset, agency and unit names are an indication of the primary manager’s name and unit name, respectively, recognizing that:There may be multiple owner names.Jurisdiction may be held jointly by agencies at different levels of government (ie State and Local), especially on private lands, Some owner names may be blocked for security reasons.Some jurisdictions may not allow the distribution of owner names. Private ownerships are shown in this layer with JurisdictionalUnitIID=null, JurisdictionalKind=null, and LandownerKind="Private", LandownerCategory="Private". All land inside the US country boundary is covered by a polygon.Jurisdiction for privately owned land varies widely depending on state, county, or local laws and ordinances, fire workload, and other factors, and is not available in a national dataset in most cases.For publicly held lands the agency name is the surface managing agency, such as Bureau of Land Management, United States Forest Service, etc. The unit name refers to the descriptive name of the polygon (i.e. Northern California District, Boise National Forest, etc.).AttributesField NameDefinitionGeometryIDPrimary key for linking geospatial objects with other database systems. Required for every feature. Not populated for Census Block Groups.JurisdictionalUnitIDWhere it could be determined, this is the NWCG Unit Identifier (Unit ID). Where it is unknown, the value is ‘Null’. Null Unit IDs can occur because a unit may not have a Unit ID, or because one could not be reliably determined from the source data. Not every land ownership has an NWCG Unit ID. Unit ID assignment rules are available in the Unit ID standard.JurisdictionalUnitID_sansUSNWCG Unit ID with the "US" characters removed from the beginning. Provided for backwards compatibility.JurisdictionalUnitNameThe name of the Jurisdictional Unit. Where an NWCG Unit ID exists for a polygon, this is the name used in the Name field from the NWCG Unit ID database. Where no NWCG Unit ID exists, this is the “Unit Name” or other specific, descriptive unit name field from the source dataset. A value is populated for all polygons except for Census Blocks Group and for PAD-US polygons that did not have an associated name.LocalNameLocal name for the polygon provided from agency authoritative data, PAD-US, or other source.JurisdictionalKindDescribes the type of unit jurisdiction using the NWCG Landowner Kind data standard. There are two valid values: Federal, Other, and Private. A value is not populated for Census Block Groups.JurisdictionalCategoryDescribes the type of unit jurisdiction using the NWCG Landowner Category data standard. Valid values include: BIA, BLM, BOR, DOD, DOE, NPS, USFS, USFWS, Foreign, Tribal, City, County, State, OtherLoc (other local, not in the standard), Private, and ANCSA. A value is not populated for Census Block Groups.LandownerKindThe landowner kind value associated with the polygon. May be inferred from jurisdictional agency, or by lack of a jurisdictional agency. Legal values align with the NWCG Landowner Kind data standard. A value is populated for all polygons.LandownerCategoryThe landowner category value associated with the polygon. May be inferred from jurisdictional agency, or by lack of a jurisdictional agency. Legal values align with the NWCG Landowner Category data standard. A value is populated for all polygons.LandownerDepartmentFederal department information that aligns with a unit’s landownerCategory information. Legal values include: Department of Agriculture, Department of Interior, Department of Defense, and Department of Energy. A value is not populated for all polygons.DataSourceThe database from which the polygon originated. An effort is made to be as specific as possible (i.e. identify the geodatabase name and feature class in which the polygon originated).SecondaryDataSourceIf the DataSource field is an aggregation from other sources, use this field to specify the source that supplied data to the aggregation. For example, if DataSource is "PAD-US 4.0", then for a TNC polygon, the SecondaryDataSource would be " TNC_PADUS2_0_SA2015_Public_gdb ".SourceUniqueIDIdentifier (GUID or ObjectID) in the data source. Used to trace the polygon back to its authoritative source.DataSourceYearYear that the source data for the polygon were acquired.MapMethodControlled vocabulary to define how the geospatial feature was derived. MapMethod will be Mixed Methods by default for this layer as the data are from mixed sources. Valid Values include: GPS-Driven; GPS-Flight; GPS-Walked; GPS-Walked/Driven; GPS-Unknown Travel Method; Hand Sketch; Digitized-Image; DigitizedTopo; Digitized-Other; Image Interpretation; Infrared Image; Modeled; Mixed Methods; Remote Sensing Derived; Survey/GCDB/Cadastral; Vector; Phone/Tablet; Other.DateCurrentThe last edit, update, of this GIS record. Date should follow the assigned NWCG Date Time data standard, using the 24-hour clock, YYYY-MM-DDhh.mm.ssZ, ISO8601 Standard.CommentsAdditional information describing the feature.JoinMethodAdditional information on how the polygon was matched to information in the NWCG Unit ID database.LegendJurisdictionalCategoryJurisdictionalCategory values grouped for more intuitive use in a map legend or summary table. Census Block Groups are classified as “No Unit”.LegendLandownerCategoryLandownerCategory values grouped for more intuitive use in a map legend or summary table.Other Relevant NWCG Definition StandardsUnitA generic term that represents an organizational entity that only has meaning when it is contextualized by a descriptor, e.g. jurisdictional.Definition Extension: When referring to an organizational entity, a unit refers to the smallest area or lowest level. Higher levels of an organization (region, agency, department, etc.) can be derived from a unit based on organization hierarchy.Unit, JurisdictionalThe governmental entity having overall land and resource management responsibility for a specific geographical area as provided by law.Definition Extension: 1) Ultimately responsible for the fire report to account for statistical fire occurrence; 2) Responsible for setting fire management objectives; 3) Jurisdiction cannot be re-assigned by agreement; 4) The nature and extent of the incident determines jurisdiction (for example, Wildfire vs. All Hazard); 5) Responsible for signing a Delegation of Authority to the Incident Commander.See also: Protecting Unit; LandownerData SourcesThis dataset is an aggregation of multiple spatial data sources: • Authoritative land ownership records from BIA, BLM, NPS, USFS, USFWS, and the Alaska Fire Service/State of Alaska• The Protected Areas Database US (PAD-US 4.0)• Census Block-Group Geometry BIA and Tribal Data:BIA and Tribal land management data were aggregated from BIA regional offices. These data date from 2012 and were reviewed/updated in 2024. Indian Trust Land affiliated with Tribes, Reservations, or BIA Agencies: These data are not considered the system of record and are not intended to be used as such. The Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA), Branch of Wildland Fire Management (BWFM) is not the originator of these data. The spatial data coverage is a consolidation of the best available records/data received from each of the 12 BIA Regional Offices. The data are no better than the original sources from which they were derived. Care was taken when consolidating these files. However, BWFM cannot accept any responsibility for errors, omissions, or positional accuracy in the original digital data. The information contained in these data is dynamic and is continually changing. Updates to these data will be made whenever such data are received from a Regional Office. The BWFM gives no guarantee, expressed, written, or implied, regarding the accuracy, reliability, or completeness of these data.Alaska:The state of Alaska and Alaska Fire Service (BLM) co-manage a process to aggregate authoritative land ownership, management, and jurisdictional boundary data, based on Master Title Plats. Data ProcessingTo compile this dataset, the authoritative land ownership records and the PAD-US data mentioned above were crosswalked into the Jurisdictional Unit Polygon schema and aggregated through a series of python scripts and FME models. Once aggregated, steps were taken to reduce overlaps within the data. All overlap areas larger than 300 acres were manually examined and removed with the assistance of fire management SMEs. Once overlaps were removed, Census Block Group geometry were crosswalked to the Jurisdictional Unit Polygon schema and appended in areas in which no jurisdictional boundaries were recorded within the authoritative land ownership records and the PAD-US data. Census Block Group geometries represent areas of unknown Landowner Kind/Category and Jurisdictional Kind/Category and were assigned LandownerKind and LandownerCategory values of "Private".Update FrequencyThe Authoritative land ownership records and PAD-US data used to compile this dataset are dynamic and are continually changing. Major updates to this dataset will be made once a year, and minor updates will be incorporated throughout the year as needed. New to the Latest Release (1/15/25)Now pulling from agency authoritative sources for BLM, NPS, USFS, and USFWS (instead of getting this data from PADUS).

    Field Name Changes

  20. T

    United States Population

    • tradingeconomics.com
    • es.tradingeconomics.com
    • +14more
    csv, excel, json, xml
    Updated Dec 15, 2024
    Share
    FacebookFacebook
    TwitterTwitter
    Email
    Click to copy link
    Link copied
    Close
    Cite
    TRADING ECONOMICS (2024). United States Population [Dataset]. https://tradingeconomics.com/united-states/population
    Explore at:
    excel, xml, csv, jsonAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Dec 15, 2024
    Dataset authored and provided by
    TRADING ECONOMICS
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Time period covered
    Dec 31, 1900 - Dec 31, 2024
    Area covered
    United States
    Description

    The total population in the United States was estimated at 341.2 million people in 2024, according to the latest census figures and projections from Trading Economics. This dataset provides - United States Population - actual values, historical data, forecast, chart, statistics, economic calendar and news.

Share
FacebookFacebook
TwitterTwitter
Email
Click to copy link
Link copied
Close
Cite
U.S. Bureau of the Census (2024). Census Data [Dataset]. https://catalog.data.gov/dataset/census-data

Census Data

Explore at:
Dataset updated
Mar 1, 2024
Dataset provided by
U.S. Bureau of the Census
Description

The Bureau of the Census has released Census 2000 Summary File 1 (SF1) 100-Percent data. The file includes the following population items: sex, age, race, Hispanic or Latino origin, household relationship, and household and family characteristics. Housing items include occupancy status and tenure (whether the unit is owner or renter occupied). SF1 does not include information on incomes, poverty status, overcrowded housing or age of housing. These topics will be covered in Summary File 3. Data are available for states, counties, county subdivisions, places, census tracts, block groups, and, where applicable, American Indian and Alaskan Native Areas and Hawaiian Home Lands. The SF1 data are available on the Bureau's web site and may be retrieved from American FactFinder as tables, lists, or maps. Users may also download a set of compressed ASCII files for each state via the Bureau's FTP server. There are over 8000 data items available for each geographic area. The full listing of these data items is available here as a downloadable compressed data base file named TABLES.ZIP. The uncompressed is in FoxPro data base file (dbf) format and may be imported to ACCESS, EXCEL, and other software formats. While all of this information is useful, the Office of Community Planning and Development has downloaded selected information for all states and areas and is making this information available on the CPD web pages. The tables and data items selected are those items used in the CDBG and HOME allocation formulas plus topics most pertinent to the Comprehensive Housing Affordability Strategy (CHAS), the Consolidated Plan, and similar overall economic and community development plans. The information is contained in five compressed (zipped) dbf tables for each state. When uncompressed the tables are ready for use with FoxPro and they can be imported into ACCESS, EXCEL, and other spreadsheet, GIS and database software. The data are at the block group summary level. The first two characters of the file name are the state abbreviation. The next two letters are BG for block group. Each record is labeled with the code and name of the city and county in which it is located so that the data can be summarized to higher-level geography. The last part of the file name describes the contents . The GEO file contains standard Census Bureau geographic identifiers for each block group, such as the metropolitan area code and congressional district code. The only data included in this table is total population and total housing units. POP1 and POP2 contain selected population variables and selected housing items are in the HU file. The MA05 table data is only for use by State CDBG grantees for the reporting of the racial composition of beneficiaries of Area Benefit activities. The complete package for a state consists of the dictionary file named TABLES, and the five data files for the state. The logical record number (LOGRECNO) links the records across tables.

Search
Clear search
Close search
Google apps
Main menu