Round 4 of monthly Community Perception Survey of 1400 respondents in 14 priority affected districts of Nepal, post-earthquake. The data is collected by Accountability Lab and Local Interventions Group, as part of the Inter Agency Common Feedback Project, which aims to capture and represent the perceptions of earthquake affected communities within the response and recovery effort.
Data used for the statistical model to predict the number of fatalities following an earthquake as in Nepal. The model predicting death counts, developed using zero-inflated negative binomial regression to account for excess zeros and over-dispersion, then converted into indices that measure relative priority in terms of predicted death counts, predicted death rate (predicted death count divided by total population), and predicted death density (predicted death count divided by area).
This assessment of the radio stations in the areas affected by the Nepal earthquake includes information on station name, location, operating status, damage, and contact information.
Total rainfall distribution in Nepal for a year and the months of April through October. The dataset was created in 2003 using observed data from about 200 stations over a 20 year period (1980-2000). All measurements in millimeters (mm).
This data shows where we distributed what, and when. Complete with GPS coordinates, names of districts and VDCs, and names of villages (when available).
Situational Information from the Sindhupalchok District Disaster Rescue Committee (DDRC) which details at Administrative Level 4 (Village Development Committee) ;
Vehicular Access
Distribution Hub
Consolidated 3W data from OCHA Nepal, collected from the clusters and organisations involved in the response. Includes P-codes down to the District (ADM3) level, with some down to the VDC (ADM4) level.
These sites are those reported as visited or pending/onoing ('to visit' in the status column) as of end 28 April 2015.
The 'visited' coordinates come from the international Urban Search and Rescue (USAR) team reports as provided to the Virtual OSOCC and to the USAR coordination centre and are from GPS.
The 'to visit' sites come from the government of Nepal as a list of names to which we have attempted to assign coordinates.
The site names are often ambiguous so these coordinates are approximate.
The list of visited sites is incomplete because there are international USAR teams that have not reported their visited sites.
Also, this list DOES NOT INCLUDE NEPALI USAR TEAM SITES VISITED.
This list was compiled by MapAction (www.mapaction.org)
Disaster data per type of disaster from 2011 to 2014*. For more information, please visit the Ministry of Home Affairs, Government of Nepal website.
*= 2014 dates are from Baisakha 1st to Magh 29th. For reference about the Nepali calendar, please click here.
Health profiles by district. For more information please refer to the United Nations Nepal Information portal.
The health profiles are contained in a ZIP package with with 9 files, including:
Health Data for Vulnerable 23 Districts.xlsx
Malaria Control(2010-11).xlsx
Vaccination and Coverage(2010-11).xlsx
Districtwise Health Institutions Statistics 2007.xlsx
CPR(2010-11).xlsx
New TB Cases report_Age(2010-11).xlsx
Safe Motherwood(2010-11).xlsx
Treatment Outcome(2009-2010).xlsx
Districtwise Nutrition statistics 2012.xlsx
A table depicting travel times between various cities in kilometers. Data taken from this map.
Distance data from Department of Road, Road Statistics, 2005,(DoR)MoPPW/GoN
Educational facilities and critical educational sector infrastructure in the Kathmandu Valley in Nepal. Data downloaded from the Open Cities Project Educational Facilities page.
Polygon and Point datasets for the Municipalities of Nepal as of 2014. Municipalities are not treated as part of the administrative hierarchy but are useful in some contexts.
REFERENCE YEAR : 2014
This is an MS Access database containing basic population figures at the VDC level from the 2001 Census. There are also population projections for 2006 and 2008.
This dataset depicts the Health Infrastructure of Nepal as points. The source of the data Survey Department of Nepal (http://ngiip.gov.np/) and data sponsor is WHO (World Health Organization).
The Nepal Earthquake Severity Index is designed to provide an overview of estimated severity of impacts resulting from the earthquake of 25 April 2015. It is not a replacement for first hand damage and needs assessment information, but can support prioritisation during early stages of the response.
It estimates severity based on: 1) the intensity of the earthquake; 2) population; 3) vulnerability of housing and population.
This index will be updated to take account of: validation against first hand reports and improvements to the severity model; improved sources of data (quality, timeliness and scale); changing requirements as the response continues. Version 2 is the latest version of the Index.
Please see the Nepal Earthquake Severity Index (Version 4 - 30 April 2015) for more information