The Two Cultures for Prevalence Mapping: Small Area Estimation and Spatial Statistics

10/18/2021
by   Geir-Arne Fuglstad, et al.
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The emerging need for subnational estimation of demographic and health indicators in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) is driving a move from design-based methods to spatial and spatio-temporal approaches. The latter are model-based and overcome data sparsity by borrowing strength across space, time and covariates and can, in principle, be leveraged to create yearly fine-scale pixel level maps based on household surveys. However, typical implementations of the model-based approaches do not fully acknowledge the complex survey design, and do not enjoy the theoretical consistency of design-based approaches. We describe how spatial and spatio-temporal methods are currently used for small area estimation in the context of LMICs, highlight the key challenges that need to be overcome, and discuss a new approach, which is methodologically closer in spirit to small area estimation. The main discussion points are demonstrated through two case studies: spatial analysis of vaccination coverage in Nigeria based on the 2018 Demographic and Health Surveys (DHS) survey, and spatio-temporal analysis of neonatal mortality in Malawi based on 2010 and 2015–2016 DHS surveys. We discuss our key findings both generally and with an emphasis on the implications for popular approaches undertaken by industrial producers of subnational prevalence estimates.

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