Concept help - Outcome Area
A statement that specifically defines the target, standard, or the ideal result of the indicator against which an Indicator is to be assessed. Outcomes should be strategic, high level and observable, expressed in clear, measurable and achievable terms. Several outcome areas may be identified for each objective.
The union of a specific outcome area with a specific indicator set and an indicator creates a performance indicator for a specific agreement.
For example, the People with disability achieve economic participation and social inclusion outcome area can be combined with National Disability Agreement Indicator Set and Labour force participation rate for people with disability aged 15-64 years, 2011 Indicator to create the performance indicator, National Disability Agreement: a(3)-Labour force participation rate for people with disability aged 15-64 years, 2011.
Tips for creating Outcome Areas
Outcomes should be strategic, high level and observable, expressed in clear, measurable and achievable terms. Several outcome areas may be identified for each objective.
Once an Outcome Area has been saved, you can attach Indicators from the saved Outcome Area page.
Fields available on this metadata type
Field | ISO definition |
---|---|
Name | The primary name used for human identification purposes. |
Definition | Representation of a concept by a descriptive statement which serves to differentiate it from related concepts. (3.2.39) |
Is Federated | |
Is Not Federable | |
Version | Unique version identifier of this metadata item. |
References | Significant documents that contributed to the development of the metadata item which were not the direct source for the metadata content. |
Origin | The source (e.g. document, project, discipline or model) for the item (8.1.2.2.3.5) |
Comments | Descriptive comments about the metadata item (8.1.2.2.3.4) |
Deleted | The date after which the item has been soft deleted and is no longer visible in the registry |
Official Definition
A statement that specifically defines the target, standard, or the ideal result of the indicator against which the indicator is to be assessed. Australia Institute of Health and Welfare