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TwitterThis report presents information about the health of people in England and how this has changed over time. Data is presented for England and English regions.
It has been developed by the Department of Health and Social Care and is intended to summarise information and provide an accessible overview for the public. Topics covered have been chosen to include a broad range of conditions, health outcomes and risk factors for poor health and wellbeing. These topics will continue to be reviewed to ensure they remain relevant. A headline indicator is presented for each topic on the overview page, with further measures presented on a detailed page for each topic.
All indicators in health trends in England are taken from https://fingertips.phe.org.uk/">a large public health data collection called Fingertips. Indicators in Fingertips come from a number of different sources. Fingertips indicators have been chosen to show the main trends for outcomes relating to the topics presented.
If you have any comments, questions or feedback, contact us at pha-ohid@dhsc.gov.uk. Please use ‘Health Trends in England feedback’ as the email subject.
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TwitterOpen Government Licence 3.0http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/version/3/
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Health Index scores at national, regional, and upper- and lower-tier local authority level for England, including indicator details to construct the Index.
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UK healthcare expenditure data by financing scheme, function and provider, and additional analyses produced to internationally standardised definitions.
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TwitterThe government of the United Kingdom spent 241.8 billion British pounds on health in 2024/25, compared with 222 billion pounds in the previous financial year.
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The Health Index is an Experimental Statistic to measure a broad definition of health, in a way that can be tracked over time and compared between different areas. These data are the provisional results of the Health Index for upper-tier local authorities in England, 2015 to 2018, to illustrate the type of analysis the Health Index can enable.
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TwitterThe Health of the region data explorer is classified as official statistics.
This interactive resource brings together a regional and local authority view of the latest annual public health data and indicators. The report draws on published data alongside context and interpretation covering a wide range of public health topics, including:
The data explorer was developed to support regional and place-based decision making, prioritisation and joint strategic needs assessments. This explorer focuses on comparing current data between different regions and local areas and complements the Health trends in England report, which shows how health indicators have changed over time. It provides a snapshot of the latest public health indicators at regional and local authority level, bringing together wider context and narrative to support interpretation of data for leaders and teams working in public health and NHS settings including:
The explorer was developed by the Office for Health Improvement and Disparities (OHID). It presents findings from data available on:
The Segment tool will be updated on 12 November 2025.
If you have any comments, questions or feedback, contact us at lkis@dhsc.gov.uk. Use ‘Health of the region data explorer’ as the email subject.
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TwitterThis report has been classified as an Official Statistic and is compliant with the Code of Practice for Statistics. This annual report analyses the updated 2019 dataset from the bioscience and health technology sector.
The data relates to companies that are active in the UK in the life sciences sectors:
This report shows that the UK life sciences industry:
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TwitterAnnual experimental statistics on health visitor service delivery. Information is presented at a local, regional and national level.
The latest annual data covers the period 1 April 2020 to 31 March 2021. Data from previous years was published by Public Health England.
The metrics cover health reviews for pregnant women, children and their families at several stages which are:
The data was collected through an interim reporting system set up to collect health visiting activity data at a local authority resident level. Data was submitted by local authorities on a voluntary basis.
Local authority commissioners and health professionals can use these resources to track how many pregnant women, children and families in their local area have received health promoting reviews at particular points during pregnancy and childhood.
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Age-standardised rates based on data from the European Health Interview Survey (EHIS), 2019 to 2020, for the UK by sex and country.
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Insights into general health in England and Wales in 2021, broken down by age and sex and presented at country, regional and local authority level. Additional analyses compare general health with the 2011 Census and examine the relationship between deprivation and health at a national decile (England) or quintile (Wales) level.
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Healthcare expenditure statistics, produced to the international definitions of the System of Health Accounts 2011.
Subcategories may not sum to aggregates due to rounding.
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TwitterOfficial statistics are produced impartially and free from political influence.
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Pivot table for healthy life expectancy by sex and area type, divided by three-year intervals starting from 2011 to 2013.
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TwitterAttribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
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The MYDATA_121312 folder contains three boundary datasets as follows: Strategic Health Authorities (England) Primary Care Organisations (England) Local Health Boards (Wales) requested by me from ONS on 11/12/2012 and received by post on CD on 17/12/2012. The cover letter from ONS states that this data is supplied under the Open Government Licence, a copy of which is here: http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/ ONS Health Geography is further explained here: http://www.ons.gov.uk/ons/guide-method/geography/beginner-s-guide/health/index.html. Supplied by Owen Boswarva through a freedom of information request made to the ONS on 11/12/2012. Data released under the Open Government Licence, a copy of which is here: http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/. Other. This dataset was first accessioned in the EDINA ShareGeo Open repository on 2012-12-20 and migrated to Edinburgh DataShare on 2017-02-21.
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Provides a collation of national and regional data to provide a baseline against which people can compare data from their own Local Health Profile (LHP).
Source agency: Health
Designation: Official Statistics not designated as National Statistics
Language: English
Alternative title: Health Profile of England
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A monthly-updated list of all financial transactions spending over £25,000 made by the Department of Health, as part of the Government's commitment to transparency in expenditure.
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Life expectancy, healthy life expectancy and disability-free life expectancy – at birth and age 65 by sex for local areas in the UK, 2016 to 2018.
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TwitterFollowing the health and social care statistical outputs consultation, the Department of Health and Social Care has formally stopped updates to the wider impacts of COVID-19 on health (WICH) monitoring tool. Files with data for the metrics published in the WICH online tool and their definitions have been added to this page.
The WICH monitoring tool collates metrics across a range of wider impacts to provide stakeholders with a single point of access. This will enable stakeholders to:
The WICH tool was first published on 16 July 2020. Since then, we have continually developed the tool to include additional metrics and make it easier to use.
On 1 October 2021, Public Health England (PHE) closed and responsibility for the WICH tool transferred to the Office for Health Improvement and Disparities (OHID).
On 5 November 2020, PHE published an in-depth commentary and associated tables on the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on grocery shopping behaviours during the period March to June 2020.
Please send any questions or comments to pha-ohid@dhsc.gov.uk
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TwitterSexual health services in York. For further information please visit City of York Council's website. *Please note that the data published within this dataset is a live API link to CYC's GIS server. Any changes made to the master copy of the data will be immediately reflected in the resources of this dataset.The date shown in the "Last Updated" field of each GIS resource reflects when the data was first published.
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TwitterIn 2022, of the 228 billion British pounds the UK government spent on healthcare*, 114 billion British pounds were spent on care and services in hospitals. A further 20.3 billion GBP went towards offices of general practitioners (GP). This statistic displays the government-financed current healthcare expenditure in the United Kingdom in 2022, by provider (in million GBP).
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TwitterThis report presents information about the health of people in England and how this has changed over time. Data is presented for England and English regions.
It has been developed by the Department of Health and Social Care and is intended to summarise information and provide an accessible overview for the public. Topics covered have been chosen to include a broad range of conditions, health outcomes and risk factors for poor health and wellbeing. These topics will continue to be reviewed to ensure they remain relevant. A headline indicator is presented for each topic on the overview page, with further measures presented on a detailed page for each topic.
All indicators in health trends in England are taken from https://fingertips.phe.org.uk/">a large public health data collection called Fingertips. Indicators in Fingertips come from a number of different sources. Fingertips indicators have been chosen to show the main trends for outcomes relating to the topics presented.
If you have any comments, questions or feedback, contact us at pha-ohid@dhsc.gov.uk. Please use ‘Health Trends in England feedback’ as the email subject.