Frontiers in Public Health (Jun 2025)

Making sense of shaky data in humanitarian crises

  • Sandro Colombo,
  • Chiara Altare,
  • Chiara Altare

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpubh.2025.1602366
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13

Abstract

Read online

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decision-making occurs in volatile and politically charged environments where information is often incomplete, outdated, or conflicting.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.

Keywords