Query Results for Hawaiʻi Pregnancy Risk Assessment Monitoring System (PRAMS) Data - HCW - talked about improving health before pregnancy
Query Result Page Options
Query Criteria
Women whose HCW talked to them about improving their health before a pregnancy in the 12 months before pregnancy Filter: | Yes |
---|---|
Year Filter: | 2020, 2021, 2022 |
Data Grouped By: | Year |
Explore a different dataset
This is one data source available in the Hawaiʻi Health Data Warehouse. Click the button below to go to the page with all the data sources.
Choose a different topic
This is one topic the Hawaiʻi Health Data Warehouse has available for you. Click the button below to go to the page with all the health topics.
Data Notes
Question Wording:
During any of your health care visits in the 12 months before you got pregnant, did a doctor, nurse, or other health care worker do any of the following things? - Talk to me about how I could improve my health before a pregnancyWeighted Survey Data
The percentages reported above have been produced by weighting the sample so that the results better represent the population of Hawaiʻi. Numerator and denominator data have been rounded to the nearest 100. In cases where the numerator is 49 or less, it is displayed as 50.
Data Sources
Citation: Hawaii State Department of Health, Hawaii Health Data Warehouse, Pregnancy Risk Assessment Monitoring System. [Chart Title, appropriate years(s)]. Published [update date]. Accessed [query date]. [URL]Data Issue
Statistical StabilityRelative standard error, or RSE, is the standard error expressed as a proportion of the point estimate.
"Stable" is displayed when the RSE is below 0.30.
"Unstable" is displayed when the RSE is 0.30-0.50. An unstable count or rate may fluctuate widely across time periods due to random variation (chance).
"Very unstable" is displayed when the RSE is greater than 0.50. A very unstable count or rate should not be used to inform decision making.
Problems with statistical instability typically occur when there is a small number of health events in a small population. You may combine years or otherwise increase the population size used in the query to achieve a more stable count or rate.
Survey Sample
PRAMS uses a two-stage, stratified random sampling method to identify the sample. The sampling frame is drawn from birth certificates. Each month, approximately 200 women who are 2 to 4 months post-delivery are chosen. The sample includes only residents of Hawai'i who had a recent live birth in the state. The results are weighted to ensure accurate representation of the population.