The line graph compares the weekly visitor numbers of four clinics in a hospital from 2010 to 2016, focusing on patients with eye pain, toothache, diabetes, and those seeking birth control.
Initially, the birth control clinic had the highest demand, but the eye clinic eventually surpassed it, with a rapid increase towards the end of the period. Meanwhile, the number of patients struggling with diabetes showed a steady increase. Similarly, the figures for birth control followed an upward trend.
In 2010, the birth control clinic was the most popular, with approximately 250 patients per week. The number rose until 2012, making it the primary clinic with around 280 patients. However, it began to decline in 2013, as the eye clinic’s figures surged, reaching 220 patients per week. After this, the birth control clinic’s numbers remained stagnant, with around 250 patients per week. In contrast, the eye clinic’s figures continued to grow and eventually became the dominant clinic in 2016, with 350 patients.
The demand for dental care remained relatively stable over the seven-year period, increasing only slightly from 100 to approximately 120 patients between 2010 and 2016. Although the diabetic clinic had the lowest demand in 2010, it overtook the dental clinic in 2015, reaching around 115 patients. By the final year, the dental and diabetic clinics had around 120 and 160 visitors, respectively.
