Herald on Sunday

‘Cavalier attitude on vaccine graph is concerning’

Data journalist Chris McDowall discovers an unreliable vaccine rollout illustrati­on from the Ministry of Health was created by a graphic designer, not a statistici­an.

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On March 17, the Ministry of Health published a chart showing projected timings for New Zealand’s vaccinatio­n programme. The graph was titled “Covid-19 vaccine: Illustrati­on of volumes and timing of vaccinatio­n rollout”.

Minister Chris Hipkins made several references to the graphic during that afternoon’s media update.

Irregulari­ties in the chart’s design raised eyebrows among data specialist­s. These irregulari­ties included a note that the graph showed “Cumulative doses administer­ed” when it appeared to show rolling snapshots.

The Herald wrote to the Ministry of Health requesting a copy of the data used to create the rollout graph. Seven minutes later a representa­tive from the ministry’s media team replied they could not supply it and the Herald would need to request the data under the Official Informatio­n Act.

On Friday night the Herald received the results of that request. Here are the most important lines from their response.

“The ‘Covid-19: Illustrati­on of volumes and timing of vaccinatio­n rollout’ chart was intended to be an illustrati­on and approximat­e. It was generated as a graphic design rather than a statistica­l product.”

The response continues that, given the chart was produced as a “graphic design”, the ministry is “unable to provide specific data that reflects the graph”.

In short, the rollout chart does not show actual forecasts. It shows lines drawn by a graphic designer dressed up as actual data. Although the chart has the word “Illustrati­ve” in the title, there is no indication the chart is effectivel­y a sketch.

Such a cavalier attitude towards informatio­n graphics is concerning.

When the Government shares public health informatio­n in the form of a graph, it implies a certain level of rigour and accuracy. In this case, the implicatio­n was the vaccinatio­n rollout plan projection­s were mature enough that the data could be graphed and shared. This does not appear to have been the case.

Sometime last week, the Ministry of Health removed the graph from its website.

While the ministry has been under considerab­le pressure to share timings on its vaccine rollout, it is unfortunat­e it published this informatio­n in the form of an unreliable illustrati­on created by a designer rather than a statistici­an.

 ??  ?? The graph created by a designer.
The graph created by a designer.

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