Large-scale population surveys are beneficial in gathering information on the performance indicators of public well-being, including health and socio-economic standing. However, conducting national population surveys for low and middle-income countries (LMIC) with high population density comes at a high economic cost. To conduct surveys at low-cost and efficiently, multiple surveys with different, but focused, goals are implemented through various organizations in a decentralized manner. Some of the surveys tend to overlap in outcomes with spatial, temporal or both scopes. Mining data jointly from surveys with significant overlap gives new insights while preserving their autonomy. We propose a three-step workflow for integrating surveys using spatial analytic workflow supported by visualizations. We implement the workflow on a case study using two recent population health surveys in India to study malnutrition in children under-five. Our case study focuses on finding hotspots and coldspots for malnutrition, specifically undernutrition, by integrating the outcomes of both surveys. Malnutrition in children under-five is a pertinent global public health problem that is widely prevalent in India. Our work shows that such an integrated analysis is beneficial alongside independent analyses of such existing national surveys to find new insights into national health indicators.
Keywords: Anemia; Hellinger distance; Large-scale surveys; Micronutrient deficiency; Multi-source data fusion; Spatial analysis; Spatial autocorrelation; Stunting; Underweight; Visualization; Wasting.
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