Colombo Sandro, Altare Chiara
Independent Consultant, El Escorial, Spain.
Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, MD, United States.
Front Public Health. 2025 Jun 16;13:1602366. doi: 10.3389/fpubh.2025.1602366. eCollection 2025.
Humanitarian decision-making occurs in volatile and politically charged environments where information is often incomplete, outdated, or conflicting. Effective humanitarian response often requires interpreting poor-quality data to guide interventions, allocate resources, and assess impact. Despite advances in evidence generation, knowledge gaps persist, and decisions are frequently influenced by political and organizational factors rather than by data. This paper argues that data interpretation is an area of weakness in humanitarian response. Data availability and quality vary across crises, with methodological challenges and political sensitivities further complicating interpretation. The three examples of Darfur (Sudan), Yemen and Ethiopia illustrate how conflicting information and ambiguous interpretation can negatively impact critical decisions with far-reaching consequences on the affected communities. This paper concludes with suggestions for making better interpretation and use of data in humanitarian crises.
人道主义决策是在动荡且政治氛围浓厚的环境中进行的,在这些环境中,信息往往不完整、过时或相互矛盾。有效的人道主义应对通常需要解读质量欠佳的数据,以指导干预措施、分配资源并评估影响。尽管在证据生成方面取得了进展,但知识差距依然存在,决策常常受到政治和组织因素而非数据的影响。本文认为,数据解读是人道主义应对中的一个薄弱环节。不同危机的数据可用性和质量各不相同,方法上的挑战和政治敏感性使解读工作更加复杂。苏丹达尔富尔、也门和埃塞俄比亚的三个例子说明了相互冲突的信息和模糊的解读如何对关键决策产生负面影响,给受影响社区带来深远后果。本文最后就如何在人道主义危机中更好地解读和使用数据提出了建议。