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Understanding health disparities in Covid vaccine access just got a lot harder / May 17, 2021

Understanding health disparities in Covid vaccine access just got a lot harder / May 17, 2021

 

The New York Times, most would agree, has done yeoman’s work in continuously reporting and updating information about Covid 19 vaccinations across the US. It’s daily “See How Your Vaccinations Are Going in Your County or State” – a map quilted in various shades of green to grey – allows you to hover over an area and get a quick report of vaccine status. 

 

 
The NYT commitment to accurate data in its reporting is historic and undeniable. 
For example, in the daily Covid vaccine reporting there are a series of visual arrays in the form of technical graphs and charts to represent things such as: 
New reported doses administered by day (compound line and graph chart)
Daily reported doses given by manufacturer (wave line graph)
When Might a Majority of People Be Vaccinated?  (line graph)
 
But the graph form I focus on today is the one the NYT used to answer the question, “ Are The Most Vulnerable Counties Being Vaccinated?” 
 
It’s been a long time since I read Tufte or studied Visualizing Data 101 but my work involves health disparities and health literacy and I was actively ready to dive into what the NYT was reporting. 
 

 

Forgive me for referring to this as a messy bubble chart.  Accurate name aside, 
the NYT choice of data design is at best, data geeks showing off their wares, and at worst, an elitist attitude about who needs to understand health disparities.   
 
Here’s my question….my version of what keeps me up at night. 
If the NYT, one of the most trustworthy sources of information in the world, continues to present only high barrier information intended for experts and elite readers, if they cannot make a commitment to presenting usable, consumable accurate data for a broader audience, then who where lies the mission of public enlightenment?
Because we have seen all too well, the information sources like NYT can’t bring themselves to share more democratically gets warped into “fake news” and repackaged truths.  I can see it now – “ Minorities and poor simply don’t want the Covid vaccine.” 

Nobody reads my posts: until this week

Nobody reads my posts with the exception of my small circle of indulgent friends and colleagues. My life’s work has been figuring out how to present #healthinformation so that people can understand it. Not all that exciting but it’s where I like to live.


So, what was I thinking when, earlier this week I came across a complicated graph in a newspaper I read and respect. Beautifully colored bubble graphs – incomprehensible to the average reader. What I call the start of a productive working day!

I posted the graphs on FB and asked for ideas about how the #data could be re-designed.

DAAAAAA I now see the error of my ways.
Unfortunately the graphic was about #Covidvaccine.
Now recall, very few people ever read my FB or blog ( again how not sexy is #informationarchitecture?)

But this week’s post was off the charts.
Overnight – I’m popular!!!!


Hundreds of viewers, tons of comments…..
All pretty mean spirited, #nastytirades , dismissive #memes #fakenews #vaccineconspiracies and even warnings about violating the #NurembergCode,
Not one comment about the graphs or my question.
You know how sometimes, among all the billions of bits of memories you store, a moment remains quite real and present. Well one of my tiny moments was a professor saying to the class (and I think quoting a psychologist (Miller) –
“When you’re arguing with someone, STOP. Say to yourself, “What that person is true.” And then ask yoursel, “what could this be true of?”
My Question:
Will spending lots of time thinking about this get me anywhere or is it more productive for me to just get on with the work I know I do well and makes a a few folks’ lives just a little better?

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