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ONS perspective on “Family Life in Britain in the 21st Century”. Dr Veronique Siegler Office for National Statistics, Measuring National Well-being Email: veronique.siegler@ons.gsi.gov.uk Phone: 01633 45 5934 http://www.ons.gov.uk Twitter @ons. Annual Families and Households publication.
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ONS perspective on “Family Life in Britain in the 21st Century” Dr Veronique Siegler Office for National Statistics, Measuring National Well-being Email: veronique.siegler@ons.gsi.gov.uk Phone: 01633 45 5934 http://www.ons.gov.uk Twitter @ons
Annual Families and Households publication Gives the most recent estimates of the number of families by type. Source: Labour Force Survey (LFS)
Short reports of topical areas of interest such as family size, young people living with their parents, stepfamilies. For example, in 2011, in England and Wales: • There were 544,000 stepfamilies = 11% of couple families with dependent children • Nearly 1 in 10 dependent children lived in a step family • The number of stepfamilies with dependent children has fallen by 14% from 631,000 in 2001 Contact: Demographic Analysis Unit families@ons.gsi.gov.uk Telephone: +44 (0)1329 444022
Measuring National Well-being The Measuring National Well-being Programme aims to provide a fuller picture of 'how society is doing' than is given by economic indicators such as GDP http://www.neighbourhood.statistics.gov.uk/HTMLDocs/dvc146/wrapper.html
Why measure Children’s Well-being? - Children’s well-being is an important aspect of the well-being of the nation. In 2012 there were 12 million children = nearly a fifth of the total UK population.. - Research from the Children’s Society (2013) has shown that a significant minority of children in the UK suffer from low well-being and this impacts on their childhood and life chances as well as for the families and communities around them. Article published March 2014: a draft set of measures of national well-being for children aged 0 to 15, alongside a draft set of measures of national well-being for young people aged 16 to 24.
Measuring National Children's Well-being: relationships of children with parents
Plans for the future • ONS will continue to develop the measures for children and young people, taking account of ongoing feedback from users and experts. • The headline measures are likely to be maintained regularly as part of the ongoing work of the National Well-being programme. • There will be further analytical outputs. Contact: nationalwell-being@ons.gov.uk