These profiles help paint a general picture of an area by presenting a range of headline indicator data in both spreadsheet and map form to help show statistics covering demographic, economic, social and environmental datasets for each borough, alongside relevant comparator areas.
The full datasets and more information for each of the indicators are usually available on the London Datastore. A link to each of the datasets is contained in the spreadsheet and map.
On opening the spreadsheet a simple drop down box allows you to choose which borough profile you are interested in. Selecting this will display data for that borough, plus either Inner or Outer London, London and a national comparator (usually England where data is available).
To see the full set of data for all 33 local authorities in London plus the comparator areas in Excel, click the 'Data' worksheet.
A chart and a map are also available to help visualise the data for all boroughs (macros must be enabled for the Excel map to function).
The data is set out across 11 themes covering most of the key indicators relating to demographic, economic, social and environmental data. Sources are provided in the spreadsheet. Notes about the indicator are provided in comment boxes attached to the indicator names.
Profiles using interactive mapping
For a geographical and bar chart representation of the profile data, open this interactive report. Choose indicators from the left hand side. Click on the comparators to make them appear on the chart and map.
Sources, links to data, and notes are all contained in the box in the bottom right hand corner.
These profiles include data relating to: Population, Households (census), Demographics, Migrant population, Ethnicity, Language, Employment, NEET, Benefits, Qualifications, Earnings, Volunteering, Jobs density, Business Survival, Crime, Fires, House prices, New homes, Tenure, Greenspace, Recycling, Carbon Emissions, Cars, Public Transport Accessibility (PTAL), Indices of Multiple Deprivation, GCSE results, Children looked after, Children in out-of-work families, Life Expectancy, Teenage conceptions, Happiness levels, Political control, and Election turnout.
Data is correct as of September 2014.
To access even more data at local authority level, use the London Borough Atlas. It contains data about the same topics as the profiles but provides further detailed breakdowns and time-series data for each borough.
The London boroughs are: City of London, Barking and Dagenham, Barnet, Bexley, Brent, Bromley, Camden, Croydon, Ealing, Enfield, Greenwich, Hackney, Hammersmith and Fulham, Haringey, Harrow, Havering, Hillingdon, Hounslow, Islington, Kensington and Chelsea, Kingston upon Thames, Lambeth, Lewisham, Merton, Newham, Redbridge, Richmond upon Thames, Southwark, Sutton, Tower Hamlets, Waltham Forest, Wandsworth, Westminster.
You may also find our small area profiles useful - Ward, LSOA, and MSOA.
The London Borough Profiles help paint a general picture of an area by presenting a range of headline indicator data in both spreadsheet and map form to help show statistics covering demographic, economic, social and environmental datasets for each borough, alongside relevant comparator areas. The London Borough Atlas does the same but provides further detailed breakdowns and time-series data for each borough. The full datasets and more information for each of the indicators are usually available on the London Datastore. A link to each of the datasets is contained in the spreadsheet and map.
On opening the Microsoft Excel version, a simple drop down box allows you to choose which borough profile you are interested in. Selecting this will display data for that borough, plus either Inner or Outer London, London and a national comparator (usually England where data is available). To see the full set of data for all 33 local authorities in London plus the comparator areas in Excel, click the 'Data' worksheet. A chart and a map are also available to help visualise the data for all boroughs (macros must be enabled for the Excel map to function). The data is set out across 11 themes covering most of the key indicators relating to demographic, economic, social and environmental data. Sources are provided in the spreadsheet. Notes about the indicator are provided in comment boxes attached to the indicator names. For a geographical and bar chart representation of the profile data, choose the InstantAtlas version. Choose indicators from the left hand side. Click on the comparators to make them appear on the chart and map. Sources, links to data, and notes are all contained in the box in the bottom right hand corner.
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These profiles include data relating to: Population, Households (census), Demographics, Migrant population, Ethnicity, Language, Employment, NEET, DWP Benefits (client group), Housing Benefit, Qualifications, Earnings, Volunteering, Jobs density, Business Survival, Crime, Fires, House prices, New homes, Tenure, Greenspace, Recycling, Carbon Emissions, Cars, Public Transport Accessibility (PTAL), Indices of Multiple Deprivation, GCSE results, Children looked after, Children in out-of-work families, Life Expectancy, Teenage conceptions, Happiness levels, Political control, and Election turnout.
To access even more data at local authority level, use the London Borough Atlas. It contains data about the same topics as the profiles but provides further detailed breakdowns and time-series data for each borough. There is also an InstantAtlas version available.
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The London boroughs are: City of London, Barking and Dagenham, Barnet, Bexley, Brent, Bromley, Camden, Croydon, Ealing, Enfield, Greenwich, Hackney, Hammersmith and Fulham, Haringey, Harrow, Havering, Hillingdon, Hounslow, Islington, Kensington and Chelsea, Kingston upon Thames, Lambeth, Lewisham, Merton, Newham, Redbridge, Richmond upon Thames, Southwark, Sutton, Tower Hamlets, Waltham Forest, Wandsworth, Westminster. You may also find our small area profiles useful - Ward, LSOA, and "/dataset/msoa-atlas">MS
http://reference.data.gov.uk/id/open-government-licencehttp://reference.data.gov.uk/id/open-government-licence
The Camden Profile provides an up-to-date analysis across a range of the latest available demographic statistics for the borough. If you require further information about the statistics covered in the Profile please email population@camden.gov.uk. Copyright: The data contained is covered by various copyrights which are included as footnotes within the document.
The 2014 London Business Survey (LBS) is an innovative survey designed by the Office for National Statistics, on behalf of the London Enterprise Panel and the GLA. The survey collected information from a representative sample of private sector businesses in London in May-July 2014.
This dataset contains information on the profile of London businesses corresponding with Section 1 of the London Business Survey 2014: Main Findings report.
Information is provided on:
The country or region of business ownership of London businesses
UK versus foreign ownership of London businesses
What London businesses provide: goods, services and intellectual property
The types of customers of London businesses
The age of London businesses, including the numbers of start-ups
As with any survey, the 2014 LBS is based on a sample and as such is subject to variability in the results. Care should therefore be taken in interpreting the survey findings. For all estimates, lower and upper limits of 95% confidence intervals are provided in the data files to assist with interpretation. The LBS results represent the population of business units in London. A business unit is defined as a site/workplace, which may also be a head office if the head office is in London. It will be the whole business in the case of businesses which only have one site, or part of the business in the case of multi-site firms.
The results are presented by enterprise size band and industry sector.
The ward profiles and ward atlas provide a range of demographic and related data for each ward in Greater London. They are designed to provide an overview of the population in these small areas by presenting a range of data on the population, diversity, households, life expectancy, housing, crime, benefits, land use, deprivation, and employment.
Indicators included here are population by age and sex, land area, projections, population density, household composition, religion, ethnicity, birth rates (general fertility rate), death rates (standardised mortality ratio), life expectancy, average house prices, properties sold, housing by council tax band, tenure, mortgage and landlord home repossession, employment and economic activity, Incapacity Benefit, Income Support and JobSeekers Allowance claimant rates, dependent children receiving child-tax credits by lone parents and out-of-work families, National Insurance Number registration rates for overseas nationals (NINo), GCSE results, pupil absence, crime rates (by type of crime), fires, ambulance call outs, road casualties, happiness and well-being, land use, access to public transport (PTALs), access to public greenspace, access to nature, air emissions / quality, car use, bicycle travel, Indices of Deprivation, and election turnout.
The **Ward Profiles **present key summary measures for the most recent year, using both Excel and InstantAtlas mapping software. This is a useful tool for displaying a large amount of data for numerous geographies, in one place.
The Ward Atlas presents a more detailed version of the data including trend data and generally includes the raw numbers as opposed to percentages or rates.
The Instant Atlas reports use HTML5 technology, which can be used in modern browsers, including on Apple machines, but will not function on older browsers.
WARD PROFILES
Compare the ward measure against the Borough, London and National average.
WARD ATLAS
Access the raw data for all London wards.
Tips:
- To view data just for one borough*, use the filter tool.
- The legend settings can be altered by clicking on the pencil icon next to the Wards tick box within the map legend.
- The wards can be ranked in order by clicking at the top of the indicator column of the data table.
Note: Additional indicator information and sources are included within the spreadsheet and Instant Atlas report.
Other profiles available include LSOA and MSOA atlases.
Data from these profiles were used to create the Well-being scores tool.
These profiles were created using the most up to date information available at the time of collection (February 2014).
How high is the brand awareness of Snapchat in the UK?When it comes to social media users, brand awareness of Snapchat is at 91 percent in the UK. The survey was conducted using the concept of aided brand recognition, showing respondents both the brand's logo and the written brand name.How popular is Snapchat in the UK?In total, 29 percent of UK social media users say they like Snapchat. What is the usage share of Snapchat in the UK?All in all, 28 percent of social media users in the UK use Snapchat.How loyal are the users of Snapchat?Around 26 percent of social media users in the UK say they are likely to use Snapchat again.What's the buzz around Snapchat in the UK?In 2024, about 15 percent of UK social media users had heard about Snapchat in the media, on social media, or in advertising over the past four weeks.If you want to compare brands, do deep-dives by survey items of your choice, filter by total online population or users of a certain brand, or drill down on your very own hand-tailored target groups, our Consumer Insights Brand KPI survey has you covered.
How high is the brand awareness of Badoo in the UK?When it comes to online dating users, brand awareness of Badoo is at 65 percent in the UK. The survey was conducted using the concept of aided brand recognition, showing respondents both the brand's logo and the written brand name.How popular is Badoo in the UK?In total, 17 percent of UK dating service users say they like Badoo.What is the usage share of Badoo in the UK?All in all, 16 percent of dating service users in the UK use Badoo.How loyal are the users of Badoo?Around 10 percent of dating service users in the UK say they are likely to use Badoo again. Set in relation to the 16 percent usage share of the brand, this means that 63 percent of their users show loyalty to the brand.What's the buzz around Badoo in the UK?In November 2023, about 16 percent of UK dating service users had heard about Badoo in the media, on social media, or in advertising over the past three months.
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License information was derived automatically
The Integrated Care Systems Housing Profile (ICS Housing Profile) is a resource that aims to support people working in ICSs and ICBs to understand, and work jointly with partners to mitigate and tackle the key housing-related issues that drive poor health in London. The ICS Housing Profile presents key housing data for London at sub-regional ICS geography and borough level. The data is presented across the three narrative themes of housing quality, security, and affordability. Whilst those working in ICSs and ICBs will be aware of the broad impacts of housing on health, we hope this resource will help colleagues to better understand the specific housing issues that are driving health inequalities and healthcare usage, in the area they’re working in. For those looking to delve deeper into the data, the accompanying workbooks can be used to find more information on housing trends over time, different geographical breakdowns and alternative metrics. Development of the resource This resource has been produced collaboratively by the Greater London Authority Group Public Health Unit and the City Intelligence Unit. The data included in this report is the most recent available at the time the report was written. The resource is provided in PDF and PowerPoint format to support colleagues in their work. There is no current plan for periodic updates of this resource. The resource includes: ICS Housing Profile (in PDF or PowerPoint format) Housing Profile Data Summary (workbook 1) – this includes more data to explore beyond the figures set out in the profile Housing Profile Figures (workbook 2) – this includes data behind the figures only Other useful resources: The Housing and Health page provides intelligence and context on the housing and health inequalities in London. The Cost of Poor Housing page estimates the annual cost to the NHS of homes in poor condition in London.
The Camden Profile provides an up-to-date analysis across a range of the latest available demographic statistics for the borough. If you require further information about the statistics covered in the Camden Profile please email population@camden.gov.uk. Copyright: The data contained is covered by various copyrights which are included as footnotes within the document.
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License information was derived automatically
The Camden Annual Employment Profile provides an analysis of the size and makeup of the workforce and other aspects of recruitment and employment in relation to age, disability, ethnic origin and gender, as well as religion or belief and sexual orientation, where the data is available. The profile contributes to ensuring that Camden fulfils its obligations under equality legislation, specifically the public sector equality duty under the 2010 Equality Act.
The child health profiles provide an overview of child health and wellbeing, in each local area in England.
The profiles can be used to:
The child health profiles are intended for use by local government and health service professionals.
Following a feedback exercise with users, indicators have only been updated in OHID’s interactive Fingertips tool. Relevant indicators for clinical commissioning groups have also been updated. The snapshot reports for local authorities which include commentary and additional interpretation will next be updated in 2023.
This public health intelligence profile describes the patterns in demographics, risk factors and burden of ill health due to long term conditions for people registered with a GP in the West locality. GP localities are clusters of practices working together to share experiences and knowledge, as well as local monitoring of service provision. This profile, and the profile for the North and South localities, have been produced to support this work by identifying needs, patterns, and inequalities at a more local level.
Updated life expectancy at MSOA for 2015 to 2019 (5-year pooled data) has been made available in the Local Health Fingertips Profile. Life expectancy data for 2015 to 2019 for wards, lower tier, and upper tier local authorities and CCG is not available at the moment but will be updated in the Local Health Fingertips profile and in the https://www.localhealth.org.uk" class="govuk-link">Local Health mapping tool later in 2021. The updated MSOA data will also be added to the Local Health mapping tool at that time.
The neighbourhood profiles are 22 data profiles that, collectively, cover the whole borough of Camden. The profiles contain comprehensive, verifiable and up-to-date statistics from a variety of sources about the community characteristics, assets and strengths, challenges and needs in each neighbourhood. They are designed to help the Council, other statutory partners and the VCS understand what is being delivered in small areas and the resources that already exist in each area, and identify any gaps.
The neighbourhoods are composites of lower super output areas (LSOAs), which are smaller than wards. The neighbourhoods do not conform to administrative boundaries or electoral wards. Their borders are instead based on the actual way that residents identify with particular areas and how they really move about within certain localities.
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License information was derived automatically
EcologIcal inference to estimate neighbourhood level ethnic relativities in psychosis prevalence - study is for LSOAs in London, UK
The Council's annual report on the composition of its workforce.
This public health intelligence profile provides an overview of Camden’s older population (aged 65 and over). It summarises the demographics, burden of ill health, hospital admissions and mortality reported in the group.
This profile describes trends and patterns in smoking prevalence in Camden.
This public health intelligence profile describes the trends and patterns in the prevalence of diagnosed serious mental illness in people aged 18 and over in Camden.
How high is the brand awareness of Ashley Madison in the UK?When it comes to online dating users, brand awareness of Ashley Madison is at 32 percent in the UK. The survey was conducted using the concept of aided brand recognition, showing respondents both the brand's logo and the written brand name.How popular is Ashley Madison in the UK?In total, 7 percent of UK dating service users say they like Ashley Madison.What is the usage share of Ashley Madison in the UK?All in all, 6 percent of dating service users in the UK use Ashley Madison.How loyal are the users of Ashley Madison?Around 6 percent of dating service users in the UK say they are likely to use Ashley Madison again.What's the buzz around Ashley Madison in the UK?In November 2023, about 8 percent of UK dating service users had heard about Ashley Madison in the media, on social media, or in advertising over the past three months.
These profiles help paint a general picture of an area by presenting a range of headline indicator data in both spreadsheet and map form to help show statistics covering demographic, economic, social and environmental datasets for each borough, alongside relevant comparator areas.
The full datasets and more information for each of the indicators are usually available on the London Datastore. A link to each of the datasets is contained in the spreadsheet and map.
On opening the spreadsheet a simple drop down box allows you to choose which borough profile you are interested in. Selecting this will display data for that borough, plus either Inner or Outer London, London and a national comparator (usually England where data is available).
To see the full set of data for all 33 local authorities in London plus the comparator areas in Excel, click the 'Data' worksheet.
A chart and a map are also available to help visualise the data for all boroughs (macros must be enabled for the Excel map to function).
The data is set out across 11 themes covering most of the key indicators relating to demographic, economic, social and environmental data. Sources are provided in the spreadsheet. Notes about the indicator are provided in comment boxes attached to the indicator names.
Profiles using interactive mapping
For a geographical and bar chart representation of the profile data, open this interactive report. Choose indicators from the left hand side. Click on the comparators to make them appear on the chart and map.
Sources, links to data, and notes are all contained in the box in the bottom right hand corner.
These profiles include data relating to: Population, Households (census), Demographics, Migrant population, Ethnicity, Language, Employment, NEET, Benefits, Qualifications, Earnings, Volunteering, Jobs density, Business Survival, Crime, Fires, House prices, New homes, Tenure, Greenspace, Recycling, Carbon Emissions, Cars, Public Transport Accessibility (PTAL), Indices of Multiple Deprivation, GCSE results, Children looked after, Children in out-of-work families, Life Expectancy, Teenage conceptions, Happiness levels, Political control, and Election turnout.
Data is correct as of September 2014.
To access even more data at local authority level, use the London Borough Atlas. It contains data about the same topics as the profiles but provides further detailed breakdowns and time-series data for each borough.
The London boroughs are: City of London, Barking and Dagenham, Barnet, Bexley, Brent, Bromley, Camden, Croydon, Ealing, Enfield, Greenwich, Hackney, Hammersmith and Fulham, Haringey, Harrow, Havering, Hillingdon, Hounslow, Islington, Kensington and Chelsea, Kingston upon Thames, Lambeth, Lewisham, Merton, Newham, Redbridge, Richmond upon Thames, Southwark, Sutton, Tower Hamlets, Waltham Forest, Wandsworth, Westminster.
You may also find our small area profiles useful - Ward, LSOA, and MSOA.