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Health Trends SSP Executive 18th December In the past 20 years...... of Life and LE • How long we can expect to live for has increased both nationally and in Salford LE in UK (years) 1991-93 2008-10 Males 73.69 78.58 Females 79.12 82 .57 LE in Salford (years) 1991-93 2008-10 Males 70.8 74.8 Females 76.5 79.9 LE: Life Expectancy What people die from in Salford Death rates are significantly higher than England SSP Health Priorities Objective 5: We will promote positive attitudes to sexual health and wellbeing by: Action 5.1: Reducing teenage pregnancy Objective 6: We will increase life expectancy by: Action 6.1: Reducing smoking Action 6.2: Increasing levels of physical activity Action 6.3: Increasing healthy weight Action 6.4: Improving children's health and giving all a good start in life by engaging with families and schools Measuring trends Action 5.1: Reducing teenage pregnancy: trend Conceptions to women under 18, 2001 - 2009 Salford and comparators England North West Greater Manchester (Met County) Salford 70 60 Rate per 1,000 50 40 30 20 10 0 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 Year Source: Office for National Statistics 2007 2008 2009 2010 Teenage Pregnancy Successes 2008 NST visit led to intense focus & senior level engagement Young people’s aspirations improving e.g. NEET reducing and GCSE results improving Additional resources into contraception and sexual health services Increased uptake of training across a wider range of sectors Teenage Pregnancy Risks RSE no longer mandated Teenage pregnancy rates rise in times of higher unemployment Recommendations Ensure teenage pregnancy prevention and support for young parents is integrated and implemented effectively Commission targeted services that respond to the needs of a shared client/target groups - young people who drink alcohol, have mental health issues, etc are also more likely to become pregnant Action 6.1: Reducing smoking: trends Prevalence of smoking among persons aged 18 years and over North West England Salford MCD 35% 30% 25% 20% 15% 10% 5% 0% April 2009 March 2010 July 2009 - June Oct 2009 - Sept January 2010 2010 2010 December 2010 April 2010 March 2011 July 2010 - June October 2010 - January 2011 2011 September December 2011 2011 Source: London Health Observatory: Integrated Household Survey April 2011 March 2012 Smoking Successes • Over 5,500 smokers access stop smoking services with 2,000 four-week quits • Increased access to stop smoking support e.g. Salford Reds rugby club • Several successful prosecutions for illicit tobacco • Over 14,800 under 16s are in smoke free homes Risks • Economic climate – potential increases in illicit tobacco Recommendations • Continue to de-normalise tobacco smoking, particularly in deprived areas Action 6.2: Increasing physical activity: trends Physical activity - 1 session a week (at least 4 sessions of at least moderate intensity for at least 30 minutes in the previous 28 days) England North west Salford 37 36 Percentage 35 34 33 32 31 30 29 2005/6 2007/8 2008/9 2009/10 Year of survey - note - no survey undertaken in 2006/7 Source: Sport England 2010/11 2011/12 Physical Activity Successes • Olympic and Paralympics • School Sport Partnership • Free swimming Risks • No statistical change in PA levels in recent years • Even less adults take 5 times 30 minutes of moderate PA (national recommendation) Recommendations Priorities walking and cycling • Facilitate volunteering in local sport clubs • Action 6.3: Increasing healthy weight: trends Source: National Child Height and Weight programme Healthy weight Successes • Obesity in Reception and Year 6 aged children has fallen at a faster rate than the GM and England averages • New weight management pathways for children and adults Risks • 1 in 10, 4-5 year olds and 1 in 5 10-11 year olds are obese • Maternal obesity is increasing Recommendations • Encourage sector lead improvements to increase physical activity and healthy eating in early years and school settings • Increase the availability of healthy foods and physical activity opportunities in local communities Action 6.4: Improving children's health: trends Infant mortality under 1 year 2003/5 to 2008/10 Salford and comparators England North West Salford 6.5 crude rate per 1000 live births 6 5.5 5 4.5 4 3.5 3 2003-5 2004-6 2005-7 Source: Compendium of clinical indicators 2006-8 2007-9 2008-10 Action 6.4: Improving children's health: trends Breastfeeding initiation % of all maternities England Salford PCT (5F5) North West (Q31) 80% 70% 60% 50% 40% 30% 20% 10% 0% 2010/11 Q1 2010/11 Q2 2010/11 Q3 Source: Department of Health 2010/11 Q4 2011/12 Q1 2011/12 Q2 2011/12 Q3 2011/12 Q4 2012/13 Q1 Immunisations Childhood immunisations – good coverage • Flu immunisation coverage 65+: At risk groups: 74% 50.7% (England 72%) (England 50.4%) Improving children’s health Successes • Childhood immunisations • Early booking (by 12th week of pregnancy) Risks • Infant mortality & associated indicators e.g. smoking in pregnancy • Hospital Admissions for alcohol, injuries and selfharm • Oral Health Improving children’s health Recommendations • • • • • Increase breastfeeding initiation Reduce child poverty Reduce the prevalence of obesity Reduce smoking in pregnancy Reduce under 18 conceptions Determinants of Life Expectancy Joint health and wellbeing strategy “To close the life expectancy gap between Salford and the UK average by 25% over the next three years.” Strategy priorities Ensure all children have the best start in life and continue to develop well during their early years Local residents access quality healthcare appropriately; where healthcare is focused on providing services placing greater attention on ageing, vulnerable and diverse populations where inequalities exist Local residents achieve and maintain a sense of wellbeing by leading a healthy lifestyle, supported by resilient communities which effectively use social capital Summary • Improvements in many health areas including SSP priorities • Scale / speed of improvement not reached national levels • Priorities remain and are linked with HWB Strategy and other areas e.g. alcohol, wider determinants • New challenges e.g. population structures