EPISODE · Jul 4, 2026 · 32 MIN
ONS sample group discussion
from Dr. John Campbell · host Campbellteaching
With, Professor Norman Fenton Links for Professor Fenton, www.normanfenton.com www.youtube.com/@normanfenton81 https://twitter.com/profnfenton Professor Fenton is a mathematician, experienced in electrical engineering and computer science. Highly published and cited academic. Professor of Risk Information Management, Queen Mary London University Specialist in risk management for critical systems. Expert in quantitative risk assessment and predicting the probabilities of unknown events Implications of the Office for National Statistics estimates of Covid-19 vaccine take up in England on the representativeness of its sample population https://www.researchgate.net/publication/364310694_Implications_of_the_Office_for_National_Statistics_estimates_of_Covid-19_vaccine_take_up_in_England_on_the_representativeness_of_its_sample_population?channel=doi&linkId=63459d419cb4fe44f31d90fd&showFulltext=true Is it important to collect quantitively data to learn about a population group? Why do we need a representative sample of a population to collect valid data for the population as a whole? Can you give an example of how a representative sample of a population should be selected? Which sample is used by the ONS to generate their estimates of covid vaccine take up? Is this then a skewed sample? Given that to be included an individual had to have been in the 2011 census and must currently be registered with a GP, how many people are missed out? Of these 8 million people that are missed out from the ONS data, what proportion of these are unvaccinated? Are there any other estimates of the proportion of the population vaccinated for comparative purposes? Does this mean that the sample is not as representative as would be ideal? If the sample is not representative, how does this effect the validity of their data and hence their conclusions? Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
What this episode covers
With, Professor Norman Fenton Links for Professor Fenton, www.normanfenton.com www.youtube.com/@normanfenton81 https://twitter.com/profnfenton Professor Fenton is a mathematician, experienced in electrical engineering and computer science. Highly published and cited academic. Professor of Risk Information Management, Queen Mary London University Specialist in risk management for critical systems. Expert in quantitative risk assessment and predicting the probabilities of unknown events Implications of the Office for National Statistics estimates of Covid-19 vaccine take up in England on the representativeness of its sample population https://www.researchgate.net/publication/364310694_Implications_of_the_Office_for_National_Statistics_estimates_of_Covid-19_vaccine_take_up_in_England_on_the_representativeness_of_its_sample_population?channel=doi&linkId=63459d419cb4fe44f31d90fd&showFulltext=true Is it important to collect quantitively data to learn about a population group? Why do we need a representative sample of a population to collect valid data for the population as a whole? Can you give an example of how a representative sample of a population should be selected? Which sample is used by the ONS to generate their estimates of covid vaccine take up? Is this then a skewed sample? Given that to be included an individual had to have been in the 2011 census and must currently be registered with a GP, how many people are missed out? Of these 8 million people that are missed out from the ONS data, what proportion of these are unvaccinated? Are there any other estimates of the proportion of the population vaccinated for comparative purposes? Does this mean that the sample is not as representative as would be ideal? If the sample is not representative, how does this effect the validity of their data and hence their conclusions? Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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ONS sample group discussion
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