DONATE

How we’re advancing inclusive data

Sightsavers, August 2024

As an Inclusive Data Charter (IDC) champion, Sightsavers is committed to advancing the collection, analysis and use of inclusive data to promote equitable outcomes for people with disabilities.

Sightsavers’ updated IDC action plan for 2024-27 outlines how we’ll advance our work on inclusive data through improving internal knowledge and practice, collaboration with partners, strengthening accountability and reporting, as well as influencing governments and others to improve their policies, systems and processes on inclusive data.

We recently launched the Sightsavers Inclusive Data Network (SIDN), a platform where we aim to share our knowledge and learnings on inclusive data. At our first webinar in June, Sightsavers and partners highlighted three main lessons we’ve learned so far.

Data fuels the advocacy arguments we make for better international agreements, national laws and policies. With inclusive data, we can show the real inequality gaps experienced by people with disabilities, and we can show that those gaps can be closed effectively, with evidence.

Dom Haslam, deputy CEO and director of policy and programme strategy

A group of researchers, carrying backpacks and holding paperwork, speak to local villagers outdoors in Sierra Leone.

Inclusive data at Sightsavers

Globally, there’s a lack of accurate data on disability. But we’re helping to change this by collecting, analysing and using inclusive data, ensuring no one is left behind.

About inclusive data

1. Inclusive data informs improved analysis and insights

Inclusive data enables us to better understand the people who are being left behind and helps us draw insights to drive more evidence-based interventions.

In Malawi and Uganda, we’re working on collecting inclusive eye health data. The aim is to help build an equitable and sustainable eye care service by providing accessible and inclusive services for everyone, including marginalised communities. The project looked at what proportion of patients accessing eye health services are people with disabilities and disaggregated the data by sex, age and location.

Data from both countries showed a higher proportion of disabilities were reported at outreach camps (47%) compared to secondary hospital facilities (32%). However, this does not necessarily translate to a higher uptake of services in camps. Further data analysis is planned in Malawi to better understand why there is less uptake among certain groups. In Uganda, the inclusive data project findings have been shared with organisations of people with disabilities (OPDs), civil society, the ministry of health and other key stakeholders.

2. Partnership and collaboration are key enablers for driving change

SIDN is a significant step in advancing inclusive data by enabling continuous collaboration and learning with our partners. During the network’s launch webinar, CBM Global (CBMG), one of Sightsavers’ key partners on inclusive data, shared research from Nigeria and Bolivia, where deaf researchers highlighted challenges in health access for deaf women. A lack of sign language interpretation and community support demonstrated the need for better data representation to serve all communities.

Collaboration with OPDs is essential for advancing the inclusive data agenda. Effective partnerships require meaningful participation, adequate training, and financial and technical support. Feedback from OPDs was crucial in collaborative efforts on CBMG’s disability data advocacy toolkit, which highlighted a strong need for training in data analysis and use to support data advocacy. In Sightsavers’ work on inclusive data, we’ve found the engagement and participation of OPDs is an important catalyst for change.

“We’ve found engaging with OPDs to be an important catalyst for change”

3. Influencing decision-makers to make processes and systems more inclusive is critical

An objective in Sightsavers’ IDC action plan is advocating for governments and development actors to strengthen their policies, systems and processes to effectively collect, analyse and use inclusive data. Advocating for inclusive data is key to standardising and improving data collection, analysis and use by development agencies and governments.

In Zambia, Sightsavers engaged OPDs in advocacy to integrate disability inclusion in the election process, which resulted in the Zambia Electoral Commission conducting a mapping exercise to identify people with disabilities and improve accessibility during the elections. Although it was difficult to quantify the participation of people with disabilities, a new voter registration system aims to capture disability data with the goal of increasing data collection by the 2026 elections.

Inclusive data and the future

The webinar offered an opportunity to understand how Sightsavers’ strategic objectives on inclusive data are being put into action across our work on implementation, evidence and influencing. However, there is still a journey ahead to ensure inclusive, disaggregated data becomes standard practice across national statistical systems, and for governments to use this data for improved decision-making and policies.

As we move forward with implementing Sightsavers’ 2024-27 IDC action plan, we’ll continue to collaborate with partners to ensure that inclusive data is driving improved outcomes for people with disabilities and the communities we work with. With the upcoming Summit of the Future focusing on how we can deliver a better future for everyone, strengthening the collection, analysis and use of inclusive data is key to ensuring that inclusion is at the heart of those efforts.

We encourage other organisations to join the global efforts to prioritise and accelerate action on inclusive data, to contribute towards more equitable outcomes for all.


You can watch the SIDN webinar recording below. If you’d like to attend our future inclusive data webinars, email Abi Brown at [email protected]

“There is still a journey ahead to ensure inclusive, disaggregated data becomes standard practice”

Authors


Abigail Brown is Sightsavers’ operations and planning co-ordinator for inclusive data.

Boma Cliford Fosong is Sightsavers’ project manager for inclusive data.

 

Want to learn more about our work?

About Sightsavers

More blogs

A group of smiling women in Nigeria hold posters and leaflets about family planning.
Sightsavers blog

Creating lasting change for women with disabilities in Kaduna state, Nigeria

Sightsavers is attending the Global Health Practitioners Conference in Nairobi on 28-31 October 2024, to showcase our innovative work to improve access to sexual and reproductive health services for women with disabilities.

Salome Luka Net, October 2024
Three children wash their hands with soap at a sink.
Sightsavers blog

How people across Pakistan collaborated to beat trachoma

Sightsavers’ Adnan Youhana shares how eliminating the eye disease was a true team effort, involving surgeons, radio hosts and Lady Health Workers.

Adnan Youhana, October 2024
Twelve-year-old Arthur smiles as he stands next to his teacher, Mr Thompson. They stand in front of a chalk board in a classroom.
Sightsavers blog

Child eye health is key to wellbeing and accessing education

In line with World Sight Day’s focus on child eye health, our experts reveal why eye screenings in schools are boosting students’ academic performance.

Sightsavers, September 2024