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The Health Survey for England (HSE) monitors trends in the nation’s health and care. It provides information about adults aged 16 and over, and children aged 0 to 15, living in private households in England. The survey consists of an interview, followed by a visit from a nurse who takes some measurements and blood and saliva samples. Interviews for children aged 0 to 12 were carried out with a parent; children aged 13 to 15 were interviewed directly. Children aged 8 to 15 filled in a self-completion booklet about their drinking and smoking behaviour and young adults, aged between 16 and 17 completed these questions directly into a computer. A total of 8,205 adults (aged 16 and over) and 2,095 children (aged 0 to 15) were interviewed in the 2019 survey. 4,947 adults and 1,169 children had a nurse visit. Each survey in the series includes core questions, and measurements such as blood pressure, height and weight measurements and analysis of blood and saliva samples. In addition, there are modules of questions on specific topics that vary from year to year. The Main Findings follow this page via the link at the bottom. Detailed reports and a link to the supporting Excel tables can be found further down this page and include: • Overweight and obesity in adults and children • Eating Disorders • Adults' health-related behaviours (includes smoking and alcohol consumption) • Children’s health (includes smoking and alcohol consumption) • Providing care to family and friends • Adults' health (includes diabetes, hypertension, and high cholesterol) • Use of health care services
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The tables provide data for adults (defined as people aged 16 and over) and children (defined as people aged between 0 and 15).
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TwitterThe surveys provide regular information that cannot be obtained from other sources on a range of aspects concerning the public’s health. The surveys have been carried out since 1994 by the Joint Health Surveys Unit of NatCen Social Research and the Research Department of Epidemiology and Public Health at UCL. The topics covered include obesity and overweight, smoking; alcohol, general health; long-standing illness; fruit and vegetable consumption; the prevalence of diabetes (doctor diagnosed and undiagnosed), hypertension (treated and untreated) and cardio-vascular disease and prevalence of chronic pain.
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TwitterThe results of the oral health survey of 5 year old schoolchildren 2024 show:
This survey takes place every 2 years in order to collect oral health information of 5 year olds who attend mainstream, state-funded schools across England. It was carried out as part of the Office for Health Improvement and Disparities (OHID) National Dental Epidemiology Programme (NDEP). The protocol associated with this survey was published in September 2023.
The aim of the survey was to measure the prevalence and severity of dentinal caries among 5 year old schoolchildren within each lower-tier local authority. This was to provide information to local authorities, the NHS and other partners on the oral health of children in their local areas and to highlight any inequalities.
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TwitterThis statistical release contains England-level findings from the personal social services adult social care survey (ASCS) undertaken in 2024 to 2025. This national survey takes place every year and is conducted by local authorities that provide or commission adult social care services.
The ASCS asks service users aged 18 and over what they think of the long-term care and support they receive. It provides critical user experience information that is designed to:
This publication consists of:
This release should be read alongside https://digital.nhs.uk/data-and-information/data-collections-and-data-sets/data-collections/social-care-user-surveys/adult-social-care-user-survey-ascs-2024-25/guidance">Personal social services: adult social care survey, England - information and guidance for the 2024 to 2025 survey year, which sets out the guidelines local authorities followed when conducting the survey.
https://digital.nhs.uk/data-and-information/publications/statistical/personal-social-services-adult-social-care-survey">Official statistics on the ASCS prior to 2024 were previously published by NHS England.
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TwitterThe Participation Survey is a continuous push-to-web survey of adults aged 16 and over in England. It serves as a successor to the Taking Part survey, which ran for 16 years as a continuous face to face survey. Paper surveys are available for those not digitally engaged. Fieldwork started in October 2021 and it is envisaged that the survey will be a key evidence source for Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS) and its sectors by providing statistically representative national estimates of adult engagement with the DCMS sectors. The survey’s main objectives are to:
Further information on the survey can be found on the gov.uk https://www.gov.uk/guidance/participation-survey">Participation Survey webpage.
The Participation survey is a continuous push to web survey of adults aged 16 and over in England. There are paper surveys available for those not digitally engaged. Fieldwork started in October 2021 and will be a main evidence source for DCMS/ACE and its sectors by providing statistically representative national estimates of adult engagement with the DCMS/ACE sectors. The survey’s main objectives are to:
- Provide a central, reliable evidence source that can be used to analyse cultural, digital, and sporting engagement, providing a clear picture of why people do or do not engage.
- Provide data at a county level to meet user needs, including providing evidence for the leveling up agenda.
- Underpin further research on driving engagement and the value and benefits of engagement.
For 2023-2024 annual data the fieldwork period was from 9th May 2023 - 4th April 2024. Participants in the survey are randomly selected from addresses from the Post Office’s list of addresses in England. This ensures results reflect the experiences and views of the whole population.
Further information on the survey can be found on
https://www.gov.uk/guidance/participation-survey
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Results from the 2024 National Dental Epidemiology Programme (NDEP) oral health survey of 5-year-old schoolchildren in England. The dataset reports on indicators such as the proportion of children with experience of dental decay and the average number of decayed, missing, or filled teeth (dmft). Data are collected using a nationally consistent methodology and enable comparison across local authorities and regions.
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Note
Values below 15 have been supressed and will show as zero.
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TwitterThe summary findings and data tables for this survey were published in February 2024.
This survey took place in mainstream, state-funded schools in England in the academic year 2022 to 2023. The population for the survey was schoolchildren in year 6. This was the first time this population group has been surveyed. The survey was carried out as part of the Office for Health Improvement and Disparities’ National Dental Epidemiology Programme (NDEP).
The aim of the survey was to measure the prevalence and severity of tooth decay in permanent teeth among children in year 6 within each lower tier local authority. This was to provide information to local authorities, the NHS and other partners on the oral health of this cohort of children in their local areas and to highlight any inequalities. The national protocol for the survey was published in September 2022.
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TwitterA 2024 survey conducted in the United States and the United Kingdom found that ** percent of male social media users had concerns about the impact of social media on young men’s health. Around ***** percent of those surveys disagreed with the idea that social media was effecting young men's health.
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TwitterFirst results from the 2024/25 Health Survey Northern Ireland. The survey covers a range of topics including smoking, drinking, obesity, mental health and emotional well-being.
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TwitterThe GP Patient Survey is a large-scale push-to-web survey run by Ipsos on behalf of NHS England.
In 2024 the survey received responses from around 700,000 adults in England. It looks at patient experiences of their GP practice and other local NHS services. The results from the latest publication of the survey were released on 11 July 2024.
The reports and survey materials can be found on the GP Patient Survey website. Data is currently available nationally, at Integrated Care System (ICS), Primary Care Network (PCN) and practice-level. The analysis tool, available from September 2024, also enables users to look at the survey in more detail (at national, ICS, PCN and practice levels), including running bespoke crosstabulations.
The results of the latest GP Patient Survey are now available via the GP Patient Survey website. The GP Patient Survey is a large-scale push-to-web survey run by Ipsos on behalf of NHS England. This year the survey received responses from around 700,000 adults in England. The latest data are from the 2024 publication, fieldwork was conducted from 2 January to 25 March 2024. The most recent reports and survey materials can be found on the GP Patient Survey website. Data is currently available nationally, at Integrated Care System (ICS), Primary Care Network (PCN) and GP practice-level. The analysis tool, available from September 2024, also enables users to look at the survey in more detail (at national, ICS, PCN and practice levels), including running bespoke crosstabulations. For more health data see the UK Data Service health theme pages.
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This survey screened for a range of mental health conditions, including common mental health conditions (using the CIS-R), attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD, ASRS), posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD, PCL-C), signs of dependence on drugs and alcohol (AUDIT), gambling harms (PGSI), personality disorder (SAPAS, SCID-II Q) and bipolar disorder (MDQ). Clinical examinations assessed autism (ADOS), psychotic disorders (SCAN) and eating disorders (SCAN ED). See the relevant chapters for further details on each condition or health behaviour and how it was examined.
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TwitterThe Online Time Use Survey (OTUS) was developed by the Office for National Statistics to help improve the measurement of unpaid household production and caring activities that are not captured within traditional economic measures, and to understand better time use from a well-being and quality of life perspective.
The survey collects information from adults aged 18 years and over who are randomly sampled from the NatCen Opinion Panel, which is representative of the UK population. Data collected between March 2020 and March 2021 covers Great Britain and data collected from March 2022 onwards covers the United Kingdom.
Participants were issued with two pre-allocated diary days (one on a weekday and one on a weekend day). They were asked to record their main activities (in 10-minute intervals) and up to five secondary activities (in five-minute intervals) in every 24 hours within an online diary tool. Respondents were able to select activities from a pre-defined list. They were also asked to rate how much they enjoyed different activities. In addition, respondents were asked to complete a demographic questionnaire which records personal and household characteristics.
Latest edition information
For the third edition (August 2024), data and documentation for Wave 8 (9 to 17 March 2024) were added to the study.
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TwitterA 2024 survey found that over half of individuals in Great Britain indicated that access to treatment and long waiting times were the biggest problem facing the national healthcare system. Access to treatment and/or long waiting times were also considered to be pressing issues. This statistic reveals the share of individuals who said select problems were the biggest facing the health care system in Great Britain in 2024.
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Contains tabulated outputs for each topic from the Adult Psychiatric Morbidity Survey: Survey of Mental Health and Wellbeing, England, 2023/4.
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TwitterUnderstanding Society, the UK Household Longitudinal Study, is a longitudinal survey of the members of approximately 40,000 households (at Wave 1) in the United Kingdom. The overall purpose of Understanding Society is to provide high quality longitudinal data about subjects such as health, work, education, income, family, and social life to help understand the long term effects of social and economic change, as well as policy interventions designed to impact upon the general well-being of the UK population. The Understanding Society main survey sample consists of a large General Population Sample plus three other components: the Ethnic Minority Boost Sample, the former British Household Panel Survey sample and the Immigrant and Ethnic Minority Boost Sample.
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TwitterFor further detailed information about methodology, users should consult the Labour Force Survey User Guide, included with the APS documentation. For variable and value labelling and coding frames that are not included either in the data or in the current APS documentation, users are advised to consult the latest versions of the LFS User Guides, which are available from the ONS Labour Force Survey - User Guidance webpages.
Occupation data for 2021 and 2022
The ONS has identified an issue with the collection of some occupational data in 2021 and 2022 data files in a number of their surveys. While they estimate any impacts will be small overall, this will affect the accuracy of the breakdowns of some detailed (four-digit Standard Occupational Classification (SOC)) occupations, and data derived from them. None of ONS' headline statistics, other than those directly sourced from occupational data, are affected and you can continue to rely on their accuracy. The affected datasets have now been updated. Further information can be found in the ONS article published on 11 July 2023: Revision of miscoded occupational data in the ONS Labour Force Survey, UK: January 2021 to September 2022
APS Well-Being Datasets
From 2012-2015, the ONS published separate APS datasets aimed at providing initial estimates of subjective well-being, based on the Integrated Household Survey. In 2015 these were discontinued. A separate set of well-being variables and a corresponding weighting variable have been added to the April-March APS person datasets from A11M12 onwards. Further information on the transition can be found in the Personal well-being in the UK: 2015 to 2016 article on the ONS website.
APS disability variables
Over time, there have been some updates to disability variables in the APS. An article explaining the quality assurance investigations on these variables that have been conducted so far is available on the ONS Methodology webpage.
The Secure Access data have more restrictive access conditions than those made available under the standard EUL. Prospective users will need to gain ONS Accredited Researcher status, complete an extra application form and demonstrate to the data owners exactly why they need access to the additional variables. Users are strongly advised to first obtain the standard EUL version of the data to see if they are sufficient for their research requirements.
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TwitterIn the United Kingdom (UK), the youth index survey showed that the share of young people who were happy and confident about their emotional well-being has decreased from 2009 to 2024. In 2024, ** percent of the respondents were confident about their emotional health and ** percent were happy with their emotional health, compared to ** and ** percent who were confident and happy respectively in 2009.
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This report presents findings from the third (wave 3) in a series of follow up reports to the 2017 Mental Health of Children and Young People (MHCYP) survey, conducted in 2022. The sample includes 2,866 of the children and young people who took part in the MHCYP 2017 survey. The mental health of children and young people aged 7 to 24 years living in England in 2022 is examined, as well as their household circumstances, and their experiences of education, employment and services and of life in their families and communities. Comparisons are made with 2017, 2020 (wave 1) and 2021 (wave 2), where possible, to monitor changes over time.
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TwitterA range of Public Health data for Calderdale including data on population, ethnicity, deprivation, housing, families, life expectancy, accidents, physical and mental health, and older people by neighbourhood and ward. Also see Joint Strategic Needs Assessment (JSNA) Data and Resources Calderdale School health and wellbeing survey Key Findings report 2024 Key findings from Calderdale's 2024 School health and wellbeing pupil survey Public Health Ward Data 2025 Update
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The Health Survey for England (HSE) monitors trends in the nation’s health and care. It provides information about adults aged 16 and over, and children aged 0 to 15, living in private households in England. The survey consists of an interview, followed by a visit from a nurse who takes some measurements and blood and saliva samples. Interviews for children aged 0 to 12 were carried out with a parent; children aged 13 to 15 were interviewed directly. Children aged 8 to 15 filled in a self-completion booklet about their drinking and smoking behaviour and young adults, aged between 16 and 17 completed these questions directly into a computer. A total of 8,205 adults (aged 16 and over) and 2,095 children (aged 0 to 15) were interviewed in the 2019 survey. 4,947 adults and 1,169 children had a nurse visit. Each survey in the series includes core questions, and measurements such as blood pressure, height and weight measurements and analysis of blood and saliva samples. In addition, there are modules of questions on specific topics that vary from year to year. The Main Findings follow this page via the link at the bottom. Detailed reports and a link to the supporting Excel tables can be found further down this page and include: • Overweight and obesity in adults and children • Eating Disorders • Adults' health-related behaviours (includes smoking and alcohol consumption) • Children’s health (includes smoking and alcohol consumption) • Providing care to family and friends • Adults' health (includes diabetes, hypertension, and high cholesterol) • Use of health care services