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Description
The news has been awash with headlines about the crisis in AandE departments. More people are using emergency care services and more people are waiting to be treated. We take a look behind the head...lines. Hunting for official statisticsMPs have criticised the way official statistics are published. They say it is hard for both experts and members of the public to make the most of all the statistical information supplied by the Office for National Statistics- the producers of the nation's economic and population data.
Metadata describing this Open University audio programme
Series: More or less
Episode 6
First transmission date: 2013-06-09
Original broadcast channel: BBC Radio 4
Published: 2013
Rights Statement: Rights owned or controlled by The Open University
Restrictions on use: This material can be used in accordance with The Open University conditions of use. A link to the conditions can be found at the bottom of all OU Digital Archive web pages.
Duration: 00:25:00
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Producer: Charlotte McDonald
Presenter: Tim Harford
Contributors: Tim Harford; Chris Giles; Laura Dewis; Evan Davis; Charles Wheelan; Terri Fisher
Publisher: BBC Open University
Subject terms: Economics; Mathematics; Statistics
Footage description: Tim Harford sits down with Evan Davies to explore the their website. We hear their frustrations and examine how the numbers are used. Not only is it hard to find data, but Chris Giles from the Financial Times explains the problems with reporting data without sufficient context and explanation, leading to poor reporting in the press. We hear from Laura Dewis from the ONS.TwinsWhat are the chances of a woman having three sets of non-identical twins? It has been reported that it is 1 in 500,000 chance. But is that true? We work out the probability.Naked StatisticsTim Harford interviews the author of the new book Naked Statistics: Stripping the Dread From the Data. Charles Wheelan, a former Economist correspondent and professor at Dartmouth College in the US, has created an accessible primer for number-crunching: stripping away the complexity and making statistics comprehensible. He gives Tim some statistical tips for parenting.Men think about sex every seven secondsThis urban myth has been repeated time and again in songs, articles and advertising. But where did it come from? And could it possibly be true? Not to mention- how do men compare to women? More or Less charts the use of the saying, and tests its veracity.We speak to Professor Terri Fisher, professor of psychology, The Ohio State University at Mansfield in the US.
Production number: AUDA816B
Available to public: no