With the aid of satellite imagery, ORNL scientists designed a microcensus of Nigeria that helped find patients in need of vaccination. Credit: Adam Malin/ORNL, U.S. Dept. of Energy
91 scientists helped count the population of Nigeria – all without leaving the lab.
Medical teams with the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation needed help finding patients while vaccinating for polio in Nigeria, a nation of roughly 190 million people. The last national census, conducted in 2006, did little good a decade later.
Researchers at ORNL and the University of Southampton estimated population counts for every village and neighborhood in Nigeria using satellite imagery and a national sample survey, called a microcensus.
“These estimates helped them figure out where to send people, how many vaccine kits to bring, how many children to expect when they went to a village,” said ORNL’s Eric Weber, who designed the microcensus the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
“We were able to do this by sampling just a tiny fraction of households.” – Matt Lakin