Understanding and accessing versioned data

The Epidata API records not just each signal’s estimate for a given location on a given day, but also when that estimate was made, and all updates to that estimate.

For example, let’s look at the doctor visits signal from the covidcast endpoint, which estimates the percentage of outpatient doctor visits that are COVID-related. Consider a result row with time_value 2020-05-01 for geo_values = "pa". This is an estimate for Pennsylvania on May 1, 2020. That estimate was issued on May 5, 2020, the delay being due to the aggregation of data by our source and the time taken by the Epidata API to ingest the data provided. Later, the estimate for May 1st could be updated, perhaps because additional visit data from May 1st arrived at our source and was reported to us. This constitutes a new issue of the data.

Data known “as of” a specific date

By default, endpoint functions fetch the most recent issue available. This is the best option for users who simply want to graph the latest data or construct dashboards. But if we are interested in knowing when data was reported, we can request specific data versions using the as_of, issues, or lag arguments.

Note that these are mutually exclusive; only one can be specified at a time. Also, not all endpoints support all three parameters, so please check the documentation for that specific endpoint.

First, we can request the data that was available as of a specific date, using the as_of argument:

epidata <- pub_covidcast(
  source = "doctor-visits",
  signals = "smoothed_adj_cli",
  time_type = "day",
  time_values = epirange("2020-05-01", "2020-05-01"),
  geo_type = "state",
  geo_values = "pa",
  as_of = "2020-05-07"
)
knitr::kable(epidata)
geo_value signal source geo_type time_type time_value direction issue lag missing_value missing_stderr missing_sample_size value stderr sample_size
pa smoothed_adj_cli doctor-visits state day 2020-05-01 NA 2020-05-07 6 0 5 5 2.581509 NA NA

This shows that an estimate of about 2.3% was issued on May 7. If we don’t specify as_of, we get the most recent estimate available:

epidata <- pub_covidcast(
  source = "doctor-visits",
  signals = "smoothed_adj_cli",
  time_type = "day",
  time_values = epirange("2020-05-01", "2020-05-01"),
  geo_type = "state",
  geo_values = "pa"
)
knitr::kable(epidata)
geo_value signal source geo_type time_type time_value direction issue lag missing_value missing_stderr missing_sample_size value stderr sample_size
pa smoothed_adj_cli doctor-visits state day 2020-05-01 NA 2020-07-04 64 0 5 5 5.973572 NA NA

Note the substantial change in the estimate, from less than 3% to almost 6%, reflecting new data that became available after May 7 about visits occurring on May 1. This illustrates the importance of issue date tracking, particularly for forecasting tasks. To backtest a forecasting model on past data, it is important to use the data that would have been available at the time the model was or would have been fit, not data that arrived much later.

Multiple issues of observations

By using the issues argument, we can request all issues in a certain time period:

epidata <- pub_covidcast(
  source = "doctor-visits",
  signals = "smoothed_adj_cli",
  time_type = "day",
  time_values = epirange("2020-05-01", "2020-05-01"),
  geo_type = "state",
  geo_values = "pa",
  issues = epirange("2020-05-01", "2020-05-15")
)
knitr::kable(epidata)
geo_value signal source geo_type time_type time_value direction issue lag missing_value missing_stderr missing_sample_size value stderr sample_size
pa smoothed_adj_cli doctor-visits state day 2020-05-01 NA 2020-05-07 6 0 5 5 2.581509 NA NA
pa smoothed_adj_cli doctor-visits state day 2020-05-01 NA 2020-05-08 7 0 5 5 3.278896 NA NA
pa smoothed_adj_cli doctor-visits state day 2020-05-01 NA 2020-05-09 8 0 5 5 3.321781 NA NA
pa smoothed_adj_cli doctor-visits state day 2020-05-01 NA 2020-05-12 11 0 5 5 3.588683 NA NA
pa smoothed_adj_cli doctor-visits state day 2020-05-01 NA 2020-05-13 12 0 5 5 3.631978 NA NA
pa smoothed_adj_cli doctor-visits state day 2020-05-01 NA 2020-05-14 13 0 5 5 3.658009 NA NA
pa smoothed_adj_cli doctor-visits state day 2020-05-01 NA 2020-05-15 14 0 5 5 3.662286 NA NA

This estimate was clearly updated many times as new data for May 1st arrived.

Note that these results include only data issued or updated between (inclusive) 2020-05-01 and 2020-05-15. If a value was first reported on 2020-04-15, and never updated, a query for issues between 2020-05-01 and 2020-05-15 will not include that value among its results.

The issues parameter also accepts a list of dates.

pub_covidcast(
  source = "doctor-visits",
  signals = "smoothed_adj_cli",
  time_type = "day",
  time_values = epirange("2020-05-01", "2020-05-01"),
  geo_type = "state",
  geo_values = "pa",
  issues = c("2020-05-07", "2020-05-09", "2020-05-15")
)

Observations issued with a specific lag

Finally, we can use the lag argument to request only data reported with a certain lag. For example, requesting a lag of 7 days fetches only data issued exactly 7 days after the corresponding time_value:

epidata <- pub_covidcast(
  source = "doctor-visits",
  signals = "smoothed_adj_cli",
  time_type = "day",
  time_values = epirange("2020-05-01", "2020-05-07"),
  geo_type = "state",
  geo_values = "pa",
  lag = 7
)
knitr::kable(epidata)
geo_value signal source geo_type time_type time_value direction issue lag missing_value missing_stderr missing_sample_size value stderr sample_size
pa smoothed_adj_cli doctor-visits state day 2020-05-01 NA 2020-05-08 7 0 5 5 3.278896 NA NA
pa smoothed_adj_cli doctor-visits state day 2020-05-02 NA 2020-05-09 7 0 5 5 3.225292 NA NA
pa smoothed_adj_cli doctor-visits state day 2020-05-05 NA 2020-05-12 7 0 5 5 2.779908 NA NA
pa smoothed_adj_cli doctor-visits state day 2020-05-06 NA 2020-05-13 7 0 5 5 2.557698 NA NA
pa smoothed_adj_cli doctor-visits state day 2020-05-07 NA 2020-05-14 7 0 5 5 2.191677 NA NA

Note that though this query requested all values between 2020-05-01 and 2020-05-07, May 3rd and May 4th were not included in the results set. This is because the query will only include a result for May 3rd if a value were issued on May 10th (a 7-day lag), but in fact the value was not updated on that day:

epidata <- pub_covidcast(
  source = "doctor-visits",
  signals = "smoothed_adj_cli",
  time_type = "day",
  time_values = epirange("2020-05-03", "2020-05-03"),
  geo_type = "state",
  geo_values = "pa",
  issues = epirange("2020-05-09", "2020-05-15")
)
knitr::kable(epidata)
geo_value signal source geo_type time_type time_value direction issue lag missing_value missing_stderr missing_sample_size value stderr sample_size
pa smoothed_adj_cli doctor-visits state day 2020-05-03 NA 2020-05-09 6 0 5 5 2.788618 NA NA
pa smoothed_adj_cli doctor-visits state day 2020-05-03 NA 2020-05-12 9 0 5 5 3.015368 NA NA
pa smoothed_adj_cli doctor-visits state day 2020-05-03 NA 2020-05-13 10 0 5 5 3.039310 NA NA
pa smoothed_adj_cli doctor-visits state day 2020-05-03 NA 2020-05-14 11 0 5 5 3.021245 NA NA
pa smoothed_adj_cli doctor-visits state day 2020-05-03 NA 2020-05-15 12 0 5 5 3.048725 NA NA