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Time Series Analysis on the Total Number of Patients Treated for Malaria Fever (Between 2001 and 2010) (a Case Study of Comprehensive Health Centre Otan Ayegbaju Osun State)
Content Structure of Time Series Analysis on the Total Number of Patients Treated for Malaria Fever (Between 2001 and 2010) (a Case Study of Comprehensive Health Centre Otan Ayegbaju Osun State)
The abstract contains the research problem, the objectives, methodology, results, and recommendations
- Chapter one of this thesis or project materials contains the background to the study, the research problem, the research questions, research objectives, research hypotheses, significance of the study, the scope of the study, organization of the study, and the operational definition of terms.
- Chapter two contains relevant literature on the issue under investigation. The chapter is divided into five parts which are the conceptual review, theoretical review, empirical review, conceptual framework, and gaps in research
- Chapter three contains the research design, study area, population, sample size and sampling technique, validity, reliability, source of data, operationalization of variables, research models, and data analysis method
- Chapter four contains the data analysis and the discussion of the findings
- Chapter five contains the summary of findings, conclusions, recommendations, contributions to knowledge, and recommendations for further studies.
- References: The references are in APA
- Questionnaire.
Abstract Of Time Series Analysis on the Total Number of Patients Treated for Malaria Fever (Between 2001 and 2010) (a Case Study of Comprehensive Health Centre Otan Ayegbaju Osun State)
This project work reveled the rate at which people are infected with malaria the least square method used for analysis showed that people are infected with malaria irrespective of the time and seasons of a successive year,
There is no noticeable direction as regarding the number of patient treated for malaria over time.
Also, the analysis from autoregressive moving average report shows that both autoregressive and moving average of order four were both appropriate while the report from autocorrelation and autocovanance does not indicate any noticeable trend in the number of patients treated for malaria.
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