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MAKING DATA MEANINGFUL: A guide to writing stories about numbers

 

Before and after: applying good writing techniques

 

To illustrate how to turn a routine statistical story into one with a much stronger story-line and more effective use of data, here is a ‘before’ and ‘after’ example. Note the differences.

 


 

Divorces – 2003

Divorces – 2003

 

Repeat divorces, those involving people who had been divorced at least once before, are accounting for an increasing proportion of divorces in Canada, according to new data.

 

In 1973, only 5.4% of divorces involved husbands who had previously been divorced. Some 30 years later, this proportion has tripled to 16.2% of all divorces. Similarly, the proportion of divorces involving wives who had previously been divorced rose from 5.4% to 15.7% during this three-decade period.

 

The number of couples getting a divorce in 2003 edged up 1.0% from a year earlier to 70,828. This slight increase was due primarily to a 5.1% jump in divorces in Ontario, and a 1.4% increase in Quebec. Prince Edward Island and Saskatchewan were the only other provinces to experience an advance.

 

The number of divorces fell 21.4% in Newfoundland and Labrador, by far the largest decline. No information on the reason for this decrease is available.

The number of divorces has remained relatively stable over the last few years. The year-to-year change has been below 2% since 1999. The slight rise in divorces in 2003 kept pace with the increase in the Canadian population.

Divorces

 

 

2002

2003

2002 to 2003

number

% change

Canada

70,155

70,828

1.0

Newfoundland and Labrador

842

662

-21.4

Prince Edward Island

258

281

8.9

Nova Scotia

1,990

1,907

-4.2

New Brunswick

1,461

1,450

-0.8

Quebec

16,499

16,738

1.4

Ontario

26,170

27,513

5.1

Manitoba

2,396

2,352

-1.8

Saskatchewan

1,959

1,992

1.7

Alberta

8,291

7,960

-4.0

British Columbia

10,125

9,820

-3.0

Yukon

90

87

-3.3

Northwest Territories

68

62

-8.8

Nunavut

6

4

-33.3

 

Total divorce rate, by the 30th wedding anniversary

2002

2003

2002 to 2003

per 100 marriages

increase/decrease

Canada

37.6

38.3

0.7

Newfoundland and Labrador

21.8

17.1

-4.7

Prince Edward Island

25.2

27.3

2.1

Nova Scotia

30.4

28.9

-1.5

New Brunswick

27.2

27.6

0.4

Quebec

47.6

49.7

2.1

Ontario

34.9

37.0

2.1

Manitoba

30.3

30.2

-0.1

Saskatchewan

28.7

29.0

0.3

Alberta

41.9

40.0

-1.9

British Columbia

41.0

39.8

-1.2

Yukon

43.4

40.0

-3.4

Northwest Territories and Nunavut 1

31.2 

27.6

-3.6

1.

Northwest Territories and Nunavut are combined to calculate the rates in this table because marriage and divorce data are not available for these territories separately for the 30-year period required for the calculation of the total divorce rate.

As a result, the crude divorce rate for 2003 remained stable at 223.7 divorces for every 100,000 people in the population.

 

Marriage stability can be assessed using divorce rates based on years of marriage. The proportion of marriages expected to end in divorce by the 30th wedding anniversary inched up to 38.3% in 2003, from 37.6% in 2002.

 

The divorce rate varies greatly depending on how long couples have been married. It rises rapidly in the first few years of marriage. The peak divorce rate in 2003 occurred after three years of marriage, when 26.2 out of 1,000 marriages ended in divorce.

The risk of divorce decreased slowly for each additional year of marriage.

 

The custody of dependents, the vast majority of whom are children aged 18 and under, was granted through divorce court proceedings in 27% of 2003 divorces.

 

Available on CANSIM: table 053-0002 . Definitions, data sources and methods: survey number 3235. The shelf tables Divorces, 2003 ( 84F0213XPB, $22) are now available. For general information or to order custom tabulations, contact Client Custom Services (613-951-1746; hd-ds@statcan.ca). To enquire about the concepts, methods or data quality of this release, contact Brent Day (613-951-4280; brent.day@statcan.ca) or Patricia Tully (613-951-1759; patricia.tully@statcan.ca), Health Statistics Division.

 

 

Next: Examples of well-written statistical stories

 

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