Number of unique women who were clients of the organization during the reporting period.
Number of unique women who were clients of the organization during the reporting period.
Organizations should footnote all assumptions used. See usage guidance for further information.
This metric is intended to capture the number of unique female clients who were recipients of the organization's products or services during the reporting period. It is not a measure of foot traffic. It is also not intended to capture the number of consumer transactions. For example, a customer who makes two purchases during a period should only be counted once. Organizations wishing to report on total client transactions should refer to Client Transactions (PI5184).
This metric is intended to capture the unique number of specific individuals serviced. Organizations should not use any household multipliers when reporting against this number. If organizations consider the entire household to be the customer/client, they can report against Client Households: Total (PI7954) and its associated submetrics.
Many organizations may not be able to report on the number of clients based on direct data. For example, organizations that sell solar lanterns via a series of local network distributors might estimate the number of client individuals reached based on the number of units sold. Details on how and why these assumptions were made should be footnoted.
For healthcare providers, client individuals refers to patients. For housing providers, client individuals refers to residents or tenants.
This metric is multi-dimensional in regards to the five dimensions of impact. It may help describe the WHO dimension when the stakeholder group represented by the metric is the stakeholder group targeted by the investment or organization. It may also help measure the HOW MUCH Scale dimension, which helps estimate the number of the targeted stakeholders experiencing the outcome. For more on the alignment of IRIS metrics to the five dimensions of impact, see specific guidance document. No single metric is sufficient to understand an impact; rather, metrics are selected as a set across all dimensions of impact. When possible, the selection of metrics to measure and describe the five dimensions should be based on best practice and evidence.
This metric has 0 related submetrics.
Metrics identified as "cross-category" are those that are relevant to any IRIS+ Impact Category or Impact Theme (i.e., these metrics are not specific to any particular industry/category or theme).
Number of Female Patients Served
January 2020 - IRIS v5.1 Released
No change.
May 2019 - IRIS v5.0 Released
No change.
March 2016 - IRIS v4.0 Released (current version)
No change.
March 2014 - IRIS v3.0 Released
Material change. Metric definition modified to provide clarity based on best practices and standard guidance.
November 2011 - IRIS v2.2 Released
Immaterial change. Client Individuals: Female (PI8330) replaced Client Information (PI8330). Minor revision to definition language and metric name for clarity.
February 2011 - IRIS v2.1 Released
No change.
September 2010 - IRIS v2.0 Released
Immaterial change. Client Information (PI8330) replaced Demographic Served: Women (DES13.1). IRIS ID / metric name changed due to framework upgrade. Minor revision to definition language for clarity.
September 2009 - IRIS v1.0 Released
New metric. Demographic Served: Women (DES13.1) developed via Original IRIS Working Group.
JII definition: Number of female patient consultations provided by the client company during the reporting period.