Tuesday, April 24, 2012

Project Update 8

I have continued to meet with Dr. Karr to discuss the four maps and to make them as easily comprehensible as possible. We decided to map the confirmed number of elevated BLL cases per 10,000 children, per 10,000 housing units and per 10,000 pre-1950 housing units. The last map shows the decrease in percentage per year from 2006 to 2009. The designated counties were labeled with their name and appropriate value. Extent windows, scale bars, and North arrows were added to each map to make each one look more professional when by itself. 

In addition to fixing up the maps, I put together my poster for Academic Celebration. This is only a rough draft that was critiqued in class. There are a lot of little things to fix that I will have to do before the end of the week. To name a few things that have to be changed, the text boxes should have a white background and should be made smaller. I can get rid of the results section and add figure captions explaining the maps instead to make more room for the maps. In addition, the maps should be enlarged, since they should be the main focus of the poster. 



Tuesday, April 17, 2012

Project Update 7

I met with Dr. Karr last Thursday and made some adjustments to map original three maps that I put together last week or so. I had also created another map displaying the change in percentage of the number of confirmed cases per estimated child population per year from 2006 to 2009. All of the counties decreased in percentage, which is a good thing, but some decreased more than others. I have to find out how to draw the line so that I can move the label out of the county to clean things up a bit. I also have to figure out why on some of the maps there is a category in the legend for one data point that did not show up when I was formatting the labels to try and get rid of that. Hopefully I will be meeting with Dr. Meierdiercks tomorrow to figure these things out. Other than that I changed colors of the counties in NY we did not consider and the other states and the label headings. I was wondering, if it would be better to not go with the percent for the first three maps I put together. I am just trying to think of the simplest way of how to display the data considering the decimals are extremely tiny, but wanted to see how Dr. Karr wanted me to go about things.

Tuesday, April 10, 2012

Project Update 6

After much hardship I can finally say that I have entered in all the data I need by hand. I have created maps of confirmed cases normalized by estimated child population, confirmed cases normalized by total number of households, and confirmed cases normalized by number of pre-1950s households. I will be meeting with Dr. Karr on Thursday to discuss the maps and to see if this is what he is looking for. In addition to these maps, I can create the same maps, but for the data from 2006 and 2008 to see if there are any differences between the years.

Tuesday, April 3, 2012

Project Update 5

I need to call someone back tomorrow to see if I can get more info, but other than that I had another meeting with Dr. Karr to discuss what to map with the data I have collected thus far.We decided to map the number of confirmed cases normalized by the estimated child population, total number of housing, and total housing pre-1950. All of the previously done maps only show the number of cases or percent of children tested. Hopefully, the maps I create will be able to display the data in a way that has not been thought about before. The data has been collected, but no one has put together maps to visually display the information. Unfortunately, arcGIS crashed while I was working on my maps and I lost everything and the excel sheets I have are not joining with the county shapefile from the ESRI Maps and Data DVD. This week I will be working trying to resolve this issue and recreate the maps, even if it means entering all of the data by hand.

Tuesday, March 27, 2012

Project Update 4

I received feedback from the CDC and was given some information regarding lead poisoning cases per year. I have looked over the data and have a ton of data for children, but none for adults at the moment. Dr. Karr wanted information and numbers regarding both, so I will keep looking. If I cannot find anything we can work with what we have since lead poisoning in children is a rather important issue. I even found maps the CDC created in order to display their information of lead poisoning cases per county of New York State and can get ideas from them regarding what to display and how. I have thought about some different ways on how to display the data and already have the base maps, so the focus of this week will be making various maps displaying different data sets and meeting with Dr. Karr sometime to see what he thinks is the best way to display the data. Most likely I will be using monochromatic color scales to display the number of cases and various percentages per county.  

Tuesday, March 20, 2012

Project Update 2 and 3

The past two weeks, the only data I was able to find online was spreadsheets regarding childhood lead poisoning cases in New York City by neighborhood from the years 2001 and 2005 from the NYC Department of Health and Mental Hygiene. This data is rather outdated for our liking since Dr. Karr is focusing on the present day need for continuing lead poisoning research. I found an article published in January 2011 based on "data recently made available from the NYC Department of Health and Mental Hygiene." However, this article also focuses on the child cases, while the number of cases of all age values might be more beneficial. I compiled a list of four additional governmental agencies and organizations in addition to the EPA and CDC that might be of assistance. I have contacted all of these groups in hopes of obtaining any information regarding the number of lead cases in the target counties of New York. Some groups did not have phone numbers, so I have emailed them and are waiting for their responses. Due to break and the waiting time, I have fallen a bit behind of my proposed weekly schedule. I have a meeting scheduled with Dr. Karr this Thursday to go over the obtained data and to discuss the plan of action for the map.