Validation of satellite estimates for health interventions: use of microcensus data in Bolivia, 2024

Zapata Bedoya et al.

Objective

To provide more accurate population estimates to support the operation of Bolivia's immunization program. 

Methods

This cross-sectional ecological study calculated population estimates using geospatial covariates extracted from Meta Data for Good and WorldPop satellite imagery, and validated them with the results of a microcensus conducted in five Bolivian municipalities. 

Results

Of the 6077 buildings identified in satellite images, 4505 residential buildings were found to be occupied. Of these, 3087 (68.52%) agreed to participate in the survey. A total of 17 617 people were expected and 13 397 were enumerated. Field enumeration identified fewer people under 30 years of age and more people over 60 years of age than expected. The Meta images provided excellent matches when analyzing population estimates by sex. Meta matched best with enumeration in rural areas, and WorldPop matched best with enumeration in urban areas. 

Conclusions

This study demonstrates that combining geospatial analysis with microcensus validation can significantly improve health planning, enabling equitable resource distribution and more effective immunization coverage.

Article's language
Spanish
Original research