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Scottish Health Survey. Julie Ramsay - Scottish Govt. Recent History. 2003 SHeS report published in Nov 2005 Major review of the survey took place during 2005 and 2006 Continuous Core and modular structure HEPS included as a module (now named Knowledge, Attitudes and Motivations module)
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Scottish Health Survey Julie Ramsay - Scottish Govt
Recent History • 2003 SHeS report published in Nov 2005 • Major review of the survey took place during 2005 and 2006 • Continuous • Core and modular structure • HEPS included as a module (now named Knowledge, Attitudes and Motivations module) • HB results (at least) every 4 years • HBs can opt to boost their samples
Recent History (cont) • Contract let in July 2007 (Scottish Centre for Social Research, MRC SPHSU, UCL) • Consultation on questionnaire design • Fieldwork began in January 2008 • First annual report published in September 2009
Outputs • 2008 Annual report published 29 September 2009 • Main and technical reports • Supplementary web tables published on 24 November 2009 via www.scottishhealthsurvey.org • Dataset lodged with Data Archive in March 2010 http://www.data-archive.ac.uk • Knowledge Attitudes and Motivations report (KAM) to be published by NHS Health Scotland in Spring 2010
Outputs (cont) • Three topic reports due to be published before July 2012 • UK country comparisons 2008 (before Sept 2010) • Children • Older People • Annual report due to be published in September of each year. • Web tables will be published on same day from now onwards • HB analysis due to be published in 2012.
Health Board Analysis • HB results (at least) every 4 years • Larger HBs will be able to get results sooner • HBs which have boosted their samples (3 to date) will also get results sooner and in some cases below HB level • Paper on website details level of analysis possible for each HB
Wider Uses of Survey • Used in a wide range of research • List identified on website of work we are aware of but there is likely to be more • ISD data linkage project • Add-ons to survey • FSA Sodium study • Vitamin D measurement
2008 findings • Main report & web tables: general health, well-being, dental, smoking, drinking, fruit & veg, physical activity, obesity, CVD • Only analysed adult data so far (except for child healthy weight and physical activity) • Nurse data will be covered in 2009 report • Reporting matrix on survey website sets out future analysis / reporting plans
Summary of Results • Drinking • 30% of men drank more than 21 units a week, and 44% drank more than 4 units on their heaviest drinking day in the past week • 20% of women drank more than 14 units/week, and 36% drank more than 3 units on their heaviest drinking day • Drinking levels decline with age • Complex patterns: affluence is associated with drinking more often, but less affluent people consume greater volumes when they drink
Weekly and daily drinking Weekly Heaviest day
Weekly and daily drinking % Weekly Heaviest day
Summary of Results • Fruit and vegetable consumption:5 a day • 20% of men and 24% of women met this • No change since 2003 • Consumption levels increase with age (til around 65) and decline with deprivation • Older age groups least likely to consume no portions, but also less likely to consume 5+
Summary of Results • 30 mins physical activity on most days • 45% of men and 33% of women met this • Steady upward trend since 1998 • Men more active than women across all age groups • Activity levels increase with income, and among men decrease with area deprivation
Summary of Results • Obesity • 69% of men and 62% of women are overweight or obese • 26% of men and 28% of women are obese • 36% of boys and 27% of girls are overweight or obese • Girls’ weight gain has stabilised over time • Men’s, women’s and boys’ weight still increasing - but rate of increase is declining
Summary of Results • Well-being • New measure using the Warwick-Edinburgh Mental Wellbeing scale (WEMWBS) • Lowest possible score is 14, highest is 70 • Higher scores indicate higher well-being • 2008 mean scores: • 50.2 for men and 49.7 for women • National indicator 20: increase adults’ mean WEMWBS scores by 2011
More info • See website www.scottishhealthsurvey.org for links to publications, questionnaire content, survey methodology etc. • Contact us scottishhealthsurvey@scotland.gsi.gov.uk