2021-10-20 01:15
As vaccination drives gain pace in many parts of the world or move into the booster phase, we are starting to see the beginning of what we hope will be the end of the COVID-19 pandemic. While some countries are still struggling with their latest wave of infections, others have made plans to reopen their economies, education, and other social sectors.
Since the start of the pandemic in early 2020, data-driven reporting on COVID-19 has gone through several phases. Initially, most of it focused on the pandemic itself: the progress and trends of infections. Later, it was about vaccination rates and efficacy.
That is not all you can do with data. Moving into the second part of the pandemic, data can measure the changes and effects of the virus on our world, shed light on flaws within our current systems, and suggest long-term solutions to prevent or mitigate the next disaster.
This was the focus in the COVID-19 and Public Health Data Storytelling workshop series supported by the Google News Initiative and organized by WAN-IFRA APAC (World Association of News Publishers, Asia Pacific Committee) in June 2021.
In three online sessions, I shared with 283 journalists from 46 media publications across Southeast Asia the principles and practical skills in harnessing the power of data to strengthen their reporting on both the pandemic and related public health issues.
One of the key takeaways from my workshop is that journalists need to start collecting and monitoring data for post-pandemic investigations.
In many Asian countries where governments only share data on an annual basis, the release of 2020 data has begun. This allows journalists to quantify and measure the impact of the pandemic and answer important questions — like, who enriched themselves by taking advantage of the pandemic?
For example, many governments were given leeway to make pandemic-related purchases and approve policies. However, journalists in Brazil have exposed irregularities and corruption in the purchase of respirators by the state through data collection and analysis. Similar data-driven investigations in Nigeria found that health supplies used to fight COVID-19 were bought at inflated prices.
Data can also help journalists monitor the recovery of vulnerable and underprivileged communities that were hit hardest during the pandemic and the effectiveness of various government aid and recovery programs. Some questions that can lead to quality reporting include:
If the pandemic has widened the gap between classes and amplified the inequality in your country, it is very likely that the COVID-19 vaccine rollout will follow the same path.
This is another opportunity for journalists to expose wrongdoing, and call for amends, using data. One good example is a report by The Local — a Toronto-based independent news magazine — that used maps to show how Ontario’s vaccine strategy has missed the most vulnerable areas of Toronto.
Another question explored during the workshops was the prevention of, and preparation for, the next outbreak. Although the art of prediction does not usually fall within the expertise of journalists, they can still inform the public by monitoring indicators linked to outbreaks — for example, wildlife trade and deforestation.
In addition to story ideas and data reporting recipes, the workshop introduced participants to the best practices and online tools for data visualization.
Some participants put their newly acquired skills into use almost immediately. Among them were journalists from Malaysian Chinese-language newspaper Sinchew Daily, which used an online visualization tool, Flourish, to create interactive charts that illustrate the latest Covid-19 situation in Malaysia in a more engaging manner.