Author

Robin Hinks

Published

October 8, 2020

Modified

July 12, 2024

R is a powerful tool for manipulating health and care data and a lot can be learned from sharing our experiences of using R with others. We bring to you an NHS-R profile from one of our Community members, to share their insider knowledge of using R…

How did you first meet R?
While working as a civil service analyst, where I was encouraged to undertake self-directed learning in R to conduct statistical and geographic analysis.

What sort of things do you use R for and what do you love about R?

Through previous roles – where I have done quality assurance and validation of other research teams’ work – I know the value of well-documented analytical process, and the dangers of poor record keeping! I love how R allows you to keep all your analysis, research notes and – through R Markdown – reporting in one place.

What do you hate about R?

I have a qualitative research background and using R has been my first real exposure to code development. While I found the move from, say, SPSS’ ‘point and click’ environment easy enough, I have found it difficult to get my head round the wider world of code development that surrounds r: learning about pulls, commits, splits and the like has been challenging!

What are your top tips for using R?

Start by coding up some tasks you already have a process for elsewhere – for example automating some data transformations you’ve previously done in a programme like SPSS or Excel. Working out how to translate a task into r’s environment is a lot easier that starting from a blank slate.

Can you please name a project where you have used R? Briefly describe what this involves.

Health data and statistics are reported against a range of geographies that do not easily match up with the political geographies our members might seek to influence – for example parliamentary constituencies or local authorities. I’ve used R to develop look up tables between different geographic areas; and using the leaflet package visually map different geographic area,
developing simple choropleth and point maps for internal insight work.

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For attribution, please cite this work as:
Hinks, Robin. 2020. “Member Profile - Robin Hinks.” October 8, 2020. https://nhsrcommunity.com/blog/nhs-r-community-member-profile.html.