Lab-confirmed case counts for England and subnational areas are provided by Public Health England and Office for National Statistics data © Crown copyright and database right 2020. All data on deaths and data for the rest of the UK are provided by the Department of Health and Social Care based on data from NHS England and the devolved administrations. This data is sourced from the UK governments Coronavirus dashboard, and thanks to code developed by Esri UK, the service will refresh when the governments dashboard is updated.To read more information such as the data collection and specific sourced, take a look at the data from the .gov.uk website here
These reports summarise the surveillance of influenza, COVID-19 and other seasonal respiratory illnesses.
Weekly findings from community, primary care, secondary care and mortality surveillance systems are included in the reports.
Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, for the 2021 to 2022 season the weekly reports will be published all year round.
This page includes reports published from 15 July 2021 to the present.
Due to a misclassification of 2 subgroups within the Asian and Asian British and Black and Black British ethnic categories, the proportions of deaths for these ethnic categories in reports published between week 27 2021 and week 29 2021 were incorrect. These have been corrected from week 30 2021 report onwards. The impact of the correction specifically affects the proportion of deaths with an Asian and Asian British and/or Black and Black British ethnic categories. The total number of deaths reported was unaffected. Other ethnicity data included in the reports were not affected by this issue.
Previous reports on influenza surveillance are also available for:
Reports from spring 2013 and earlier are available on https://webarchive.nationalarchives.gov.uk/20140629102650tf_/http://www.hpa.org.uk/Publications/InfectiousDiseases/Influenza/" class="govuk-link">the UK Government Web Archive.
View previous COVID-19 surveillance reports.
http://reference.data.gov.uk/id/open-government-licencehttp://reference.data.gov.uk/id/open-government-licence
Data identifying the location of Public Health England Centres. For more information, please see the ONS Geoportal website.
Boundaries for these geographies have been generalised (to 20 metres) and clipped. You can find further information on these formats in the downloadable Boundary Guidance document on the Open Geography portal.
When using boundary data, please acknowledge the copyright and the source of the data by including the following attribution statements:
Contains National Statistics data © Crown copyright and database right (2016)
Contains OS data © Crown copyright and database right (2016)
For more details about licencing go to: https://www.ons.gov.uk/methodology/geography/licences
All data is correct as of download date: 21/11/2016
Changes to the HSE from 2015:
Users should note that from 2015 survey onwards, only the individual data file is available under standard End User Licence (EUL). The household data file is now only included in the Special Licence (SL) version, released from 2015 onwards. In addition, the SL individual file contains all the variables included in the HSE EUL dataset, plus others, including variables removed from the EUL version after the NHS Digital disclosure review. The SL HSE is subject to more restrictive access conditions than the EUL version (see Access information). Users are advised to obtain the EUL version to see if it meets their needs before considering an application for the SL version.
COVID-19 and the HSE:
Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the HSE 2020 survey was stopped in March 2020 and never re-started. There was no publication that year. The survey resumed in 2021, albeit with an amended methodology. The full HSE resumed in 2022, with an extended fieldwork period. Due to this, the decision was taken not to progress with the 2023 survey, to maximise the 2022 survey response and enable more robust reporting of data. See the NHS Digital Health Survey for England - Health, social care and lifestyles webpage for more details.
The Health Survey for England, 2017: Special Licence Access is available from the UK Data Archive under SN 9084.
Latest edition information:
For the third edition (May 2023), a number of corrections were made to the data file and the data documentation file. Further information is available in the documentation file '8488_hse_2017_eul_v3_corrections_to_ukds.pdf’.
Changes to the HSE from 2015:
Users should note that from 2015 survey onwards, only the individual data file is available under standard End User Licence (EUL). The household data file is now only included in the Special Licence (SL) version, released from 2015 onwards. In addition, the SL individual file contains all the variables included in the HSE EUL dataset, plus others, including variables removed from the EUL version after the NHS Digital disclosure review. The SL HSE is subject to more restrictive access conditions than the EUL version (see Access information). Users are advised to obtain the EUL version to see if it meets their needs before considering an application for the SL version.
COVID-19 and the HSE:
Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the HSE 2020 survey was stopped in March 2020 and never re-started. There was no publication that year. The survey resumed in 2021, albeit with an amended methodology. The full HSE resumed in 2022, with an extended fieldwork period. Due to this, the decision was taken not to progress with the 2023 survey, to maximise the 2022 survey response and enable more robust reporting of data. See the NHS Digital Health Survey for England - Health, social care and lifestyles webpage for more details.
The Health Survey for England, 2016: Special Licence Access is available from the UK Data Archive under SN 9084.
Latest edition information:
For the fourth edition (May 2023), a number of corrections were made to the data file and the data documentation file. Further information is available in the documentation file '8334_hse_2016_eul_v5_corrections_to_ukds.pdf'.
The Obesity Profile (previously named NCMP and Child Obesity Profile) displays data from the National Child Measurement Programme (NCMP) showing the prevalence of obesity, severe obesity, overweight, healthy weight and underweight at local authority (LA), regional and national level over time; for children in Reception (aged 4 to 5 years) and Year 6 (aged 10 to 11 years).
Users can compare LA data by region or between ‘The Chartered Institute of Public Finance and Accountancy (CIPFA) nearest neighbours’ (LAs with similar characteristics).
The tool also presents inequalities in child obesity prevalence by sex, deprivation quintile and ethnic group by local authority. The profile also includes child obesity slope index of inequality (SII) for each of the 9 English regions and England.
School closures, in March 2020, due to the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic meant that in 2019 to 2020 the number of children measured was around 75% of previous years. Analysis by NHS Digital shows that national and regional level data is reliable and comparable to previous years. The data at local authority level and below is not as robust, as a result a small number of areas do not have published data for 2019 to 2020 and data for some areas have a reliability flag indicating that figures need to be interpreted with caution. Further information is available in the Obesity Profile and in the https://digital.nhs.uk/data-and-information/publications/statistical/national-child-measurement-programme/2019-20-school-year" class="govuk-link">NHS Digital 2019 to 2020 annual report .
The NCMP small area data domain displays trend data on the prevalence of excess weight (overweight including obesity) and obesity for Middle Super Output Areas (MSOAs), Electoral Wards, and Clinical Commissioning Groups (CCG) with comparator data for local authorities and England.
To produce as robust an indicator as possible at small area level, the prevalence estimates use three years of NCMP data combined; the latest data is presented for 2017 to 2018 up to 2019 to 2020 combined. In the three-year grouped NCMP data for small areas we would expect around 33% of data from each contributing year. Values for areas where less than 20% of data is from 2019 to 2020 is flagged in the Obesity Profile. The percentage contribution of 2019 to 2020 data to the three-year data for each geographic area is available on the https://digital.nhs.uk/data-and-information/publications/statistical/national-child-measurement-programme/2019-20-school-year" class="govuk-link">NHS Digital website. The obesity, and excess weight prevalence indicators at small area level for 2017 to 2018 up to 2019 to 2020 are still considered to be reliable even with a small amount of data from 2019 to 2020.
A new domain (Adult prevalence data) has been added to this profile to display indicators on adult excess weight and obesity in early pregnancy. More indicators for other adult BMI categories will be added in 2021.
Open Government Licence 3.0http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/version/3/
License information was derived automatically
UK healthcare expenditure data by financing scheme, function and provider, and additional analyses produced to internationally standardised definitions.
CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedicationhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
License information was derived automatically
🇬🇧 영국 English Data identifying the location of Public Health England Regions. For more information, please see the ONS Geoportal website. Boundaries for these geographies have been generalised (to 20 metres) and clipped. You can find further information on these formats in the downloadable Boundary Guidance document on the Open Geography portal. When using boundary data, please acknowledge the copyright and the source of the data by including the following attribution statements: Contains National Statistics data © Crown copyright and database right (2016) Contains OS data © Crown copyright and database right (2016) For more details about licencing go to: https://www.ons.gov.uk/methodology/geography/licences All data is correct as of download date: 21/11/2016 리소스 ZIP Public Health England Regions - July 2015 (clipped and generalised) 다운로드
shp. file (zipped) containing boundary data for all Public Health England Regions.
For more information please go to the ONS Geoportal website.
Contains both Ordnance Survey and ONS Intellectual Property Rights.
ZIP Midlands & East of England Public Health England Regions - July 2015 (clipped and generalised)Public Health England (PHE) has published the Local Alcohol Profiles for England (LAPE) data update for June 2015 in a new interactive tool.
The tool presents data for 19 alcohol-related indicators and allows users to view and analyse data in a user-friendly format. The https://fingertips.phe.org.uk/profile/local-alcohol-profiles" class="govuk-link">LAPE website also provides links to further supporting and relevant information to aid understanding of alcohol-related harm in a local population.
http://fingertips.phe.org.uk/profile/local-alcohol-profiles" class="govuk-link">View the Local Alcohol Profiles for England data tool
This update includes:
https://digital.nhs.uk/about-nhs-digital/terms-and-conditionshttps://digital.nhs.uk/about-nhs-digital/terms-and-conditions
This report presents statistics on women’s smoking status at time of delivery, at Sub Integrated Care Board (Sub-ICB), Integrated Care Board (ICB), regional and national levels. This release includes data for quarter 4 of 2023-24 alongside finalised data for the 2023-24 financial year. Please see DQ table 1 for details of coverage issues given by submitters for this collection.
https://digital.nhs.uk/about-nhs-digital/terms-and-conditionshttps://digital.nhs.uk/about-nhs-digital/terms-and-conditions
What About YOUth? 2014 (WAY 2014) is a newly-established survey designed to collect robust local authority (LA) level data on a range of health behaviours amongst 15 year-olds. Therefore, this is also the first report to be published from the survey, covering the smoking findings only in order to meet the PHOF release data requirements. The Health and Social Care Information Centre (HSCIC) was commissioned by the Department of Health to run the survey in direct response to the Children and Young People's Health Outcomes Forum. This Forum identified gaps in the Public Health Outcomes Framework (PHOF) and other key health behaviour measures relating to young people. HSCIC contracted Ipsos MORI to carry out the survey. The PHOF included a placeholder indicator on smoking prevalence at age 15 and the data from this survey will now become the source for this PHOF indicator. This report covers all the information required for the PHOF on smoking prevalence plus other information on attitudes to smoking, e-cigarette use and use of other tobacco products (such as shisha) and will allow comparisons between LAs and against the national position. The smoking prevalence findings needed for the PHOF have also been published by Public Health England (PHE) on 4 August 2015 via their Fingertips tool on their website (see resource links). WAY 2014 is the first survey to be conducted of its kind and it is hoped that the survey will be repeated in order to form a time series of comparable data on a range of indicators for 15 year-olds across England. Other than smoking, data has been collected on other topics including general health, diet, use of free time, physical activity, drinking, emotional wellbeing, drugs and bullying. HSCIC plan to publish a main report covering all the key findings from the survey in December 2015. This is ground-breaking for LAs as new data will become available to better inform local policy making.
https://digital.nhs.uk/about-nhs-digital/terms-and-conditionshttps://digital.nhs.uk/about-nhs-digital/terms-and-conditions
This report presents information on obesity, physical activity and diet drawn together from a variety of sources for England. More information can be found in the source publications which contain a wider range of data and analysis. Each section provides an overview of key findings, as well as providing links to relevant documents and sources. Some of the data have been published previously by NHS Digital. A data visualisation tool (link provided within the key facts) allows users to select obesity related hospital admissions data for any Local Authority (as contained in the data tables), along with time series data from 2013/14. Regional and national comparisons are also provided. The report includes information on: Obesity related hospital admissions, including obesity related bariatric surgery. Obesity prevalence. Physical activity levels. Walking and cycling rates. Prescriptions items for the treatment of obesity. Perception of weight and weight management. Food and drink purchases and expenditure. Fruit and vegetable consumption. Key facts cover the latest year of data available: Hospital admissions: 2018/19 Adult obesity: 2018 Childhood obesity: 2018/19 Adult physical activity: 12 months to November 2019 Children and young people's physical activity: 2018/19 academic year
In March 2024, nih.gov was the leading health website in the United Kingdom. During the measured period, the health website accounted for over 6. percent of desktop traffic in the health subcategory. Nhs.uk, the National Health Service, the publicly funded healthcare system in England, was ranked second with a 4.89 percent market share.
The Mental Health of Children and Young People Surveys (MHCYP) series provides data about the mental health of young people living in Great Britain.
The MHCYP was first carried out in 1999, capturing information on 5 to 15-year-olds. It was conducted by the Office for National Statistics (ONS) on behalf of the Department of Health (now known as the Department of Health and Social Care, or DHSC), The Scottish Health Executive and the National Assembly for Wales. The following survey in the series was conducted in 2002 and focused on children looked after by their local authority. The third survey was conducted in 2004 and collected information from 5 to 16-year-olds. Follow-ups to this survey were conducted after 6 months and again after 3 years.
NHS Digital commissioned the 2017 survey on behalf of the DHSC. It collected information on 2 to 19-year-olds living in England. The survey was carried out by a consortium led by NatCen Social Research, which included the ONS and Youth In Mind.
The MHCYP 2020 survey was a Wave 1 follow-up to the 2017 survey and was conducted under the COVID-19 Public Health Directions 2020, as directed by the then Secretary of State for Health. The Wave 2 follow-up was conducted in 2021, and Wave 3 in 2022.
Further information can be found on the NHS Digital Mental Health of Children and Young People Surveys webpage.
A similar series covering adults, the Adult Surveys of Psychiatric Morbidity, is also commissioned by NHS Digital.
The Mental Health of Children and Young People in England, 2020: Special Licence Access (MHCYP) is the first in a series of follow-up surveys to the MHCYP 2017 survey (which in itself was the third survey of its kind - see SN 8467 - with previous MHCYPs carried out in 1999, 2004). The 2020 MHCYP was funded by the Department of Health and Social Care and commissioned by NHS England. The survey was carried out by the National Centre for Social Research (NatCen Social Research), the Office for National Statistics, the University of Cambridge and the University of Exeter.
The MHCYP surveys provide England's Official Statistics on trends in child mental health. The MHCYP 2017 was conducted face-to-face and involved data collection from a random sample of children and young people (aged 2 to 19 years). MHCYP 2017 participants (now aged 5 to 22 years) who agreed to be re-contacted for future research were invited to take part in a follow-up online survey in July 2020. Therefore, the achieved MHCYP 2020 sample for this (Wave 1) follow-up was based on 3,570 children and young people who took part in MHCYP 2017, with both surveys also drawing on information collected from parents.
The two main aims of MHCYP 2020 were:
Latest edition information
For the second edition (September 2024) a new version of the data file was deposited, with derived variables included that had not been populated in the first edition.
https://digital.nhs.uk/about-nhs-digital/terms-and-conditionshttps://digital.nhs.uk/about-nhs-digital/terms-and-conditions
This is a monthly report on publicly funded community services for people of all ages using data from the Community Services Data Set (CSDS) reported in England for November 2024. It has been developed to help achieve better outcomes and provide data that will be used to commission services in a way that improves health, reduces inequalities, and supports service improvement and clinical quality. These statistics are classified as experimental and should be used with caution. Experimental statistics are new official statistics undergoing evaluation. More information about experimental statistics can be found on the UK Statistics Authority website (linked at the bottom of this page). A provisional data file for December 2024 is now included in this publication. Please note this is intended as an early view until providers submit a refresh of their data, which will be published next month.
The following slide sets are available to download for presentational use:
New HIV diagnoses, AIDS and deaths are collected from HIV outpatient clinics, laboratories and other healthcare settings. Data relating to people living with HIV is collected from HIV outpatient clinics. Data relates to England, Wales, Northern Ireland and Scotland, unless stated.
HIV testing, pre-exposure prophylaxis, and post-exposure prophylaxis data relates to activity at sexual health services in England only.
View the pre-release access lists for these statistics.
Previous reports, data tables and slide sets are also available for:
Our statistical practice is regulated by the Office for Statistics Regulation (OSR). The OSR sets the standards of trustworthiness, quality and value in the https://code.statisticsauthority.gov.uk/" class="govuk-link">Code of Practice for Statistics that all producers of Official Statistics should adhere to.
Additional information on HIV surveillance can be found in the HIV Action Plan for England monitoring and evaluation framework reports. Other HIV in the UK reports published by Public Health England (PHE) are available online.
Download https://khub.net/documents/135939561/1051496671/Sexually+transmitted+infections+in+England%2C+2024.odp/556ce163-d5a1-5dbe-ecbf-22ea19b38fba" class="govuk-link">England STI slide set 2024 for presentational use.
Download https://khub.net/documents/135939561/1051496671/Sexually+transmitted+infections+in+England+2024.pdf/389966d2-91b0-6bde-86d5-c8f218c443e5" class="govuk-link">STI and NCSP infographic 2024 for presentational use.
The UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) collects data on all sexually transmitted infection (STI) diagnoses made at sexual health services in England. This page includes information on trends in STI diagnoses, as well as the numbers and rates of diagnoses by demographic characteristics and UKHSA public health region.
View the pre-release access lists for these statistics.
Previous reports, data tables, slide sets, infographics, and pre-release access lists are available online:
The STI quarterly surveillance reports of provisional data for diagnoses of syphilis, gonorrhoea and ceftriaxone-resistant gonorrhoea in England are also available online.
Our statistical practice is regulated by the Office for Statistics Regulation (OSR). The OSR sets the standards of trustworthiness, quality and value in the https://code.statisticsauthority.gov.uk/" class="govuk-link">Code of Practice for Statistics that all producers of Official Statistics should adhere to.
Changes to the HSE from 2015:
Users should note that from 2015 survey onwards, only the individual data file is available under standard End User Licence (EUL). The household data file is now only included in the Special Licence (SL) version, released from 2015 onwards. In addition, the SL individual file contains all the variables included in the HSE EUL dataset, plus others, including variables removed from the EUL version after the NHS Digital disclosure review. The SL HSE is subject to more restrictive access conditions than the EUL version (see Access information). Users are advised to obtain the EUL version to see if it meets their needs before considering an application for the SL version.
COVID-19 and the HSE:
Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the HSE 2020 survey was stopped in March 2020 and never re-started. There was no publication that year. The survey resumed in 2021, albeit with an amended methodology. The full HSE resumed in 2022, with an extended fieldwork period. Due to this, the decision was taken not to progress with the 2023 survey, to maximise the 2022 survey response and enable more robust reporting of data. See the NHS Digital Health Survey for England - Health, social care and lifestyles webpage for more details.
Inter-Authority Agreement for the Shared Public Health Service for Harrow and Barnet
From 1 April 2013, Harrow Council became the host borough for the newly formed joint Public Health team for Harrow and Barnet.
This followed a White Paper that sets out the vision for a reformed Public Health system in England , which included the transfer of the majority of Public Health functions to local authorities by April 2013.
For more information, please see out website
ODC Public Domain Dedication and Licence (PDDL) v1.0http://www.opendatacommons.org/licenses/pddl/1.0/
License information was derived automatically
This dataset shows the location of NHS and other health care sites in Great Britain. Over 12,000 locations are shown and each has a number of attributes such as whether they are private or state sites, dispensing or non-dispensing and their designation (GP, Hospital, Community Hospital). This data was kindly supplied by Keith MacDonald of www.doctors.net.uk The data was originally sourced from the NHS website at the following location: http://www.nhs.uk/servicedirectories/Pages/ServiceSearch.aspx. GIS vector data. This dataset was first accessioned in the EDINA ShareGeo Open repository on 2011-08-08 and migrated to Edinburgh DataShare on 2017-02-21.
Lab-confirmed case counts for England and subnational areas are provided by Public Health England and Office for National Statistics data © Crown copyright and database right 2020. All data on deaths and data for the rest of the UK are provided by the Department of Health and Social Care based on data from NHS England and the devolved administrations. This data is sourced from the UK governments Coronavirus dashboard, and thanks to code developed by Esri UK, the service will refresh when the governments dashboard is updated.To read more information such as the data collection and specific sourced, take a look at the data from the .gov.uk website here