Summary of the 2021 update to the Oxfordshire Joint Strategic Needs Assessment giving health and wellbeing facts and figures.
Amended 18/06/2021: community safety statistics - victims data now refers to counts of unique victims.
The summary includes:
an introduction to Oxfordshire
a one-page summary of the data that we have been able to include in this update showing early indications of the impact of COVID-19 on health and wellbeing in Oxfordshire
one-page summaries for the JSNA overall and for young people, for working age adults and for older people
a JSNA visual summary "snake" showing data by life-stage
a JSNA inequalities data "tartan rug" for Oxfordshire showing health and wellbeing indicators at Middle Layer Super Output Area level and highlighting which areas rank as worse or bettet than the England average
Note that this information in this report is also included as the Executive Summary of the Oxfordshire JSNA 2021
Unemployment claimant count data (released 23 February 2021) by the Department of Work and Pensions) shows the number of people claiming unemployment-related benefits in Oxfordshire decreased slightly between December 2020 and January 2021, from 16,305 to 16,235 (-0.4%).
The charts below show the recorded ethnicities and first language (English/Other) of Primary and Secondary (national curriculum years 1-11) pupils who attend Oxfordshire schools, split by the District in which they live. The underlying data comes from the January 2020 School Census*.
Unemployment claimant count data (released 26 January 2021) by the Department of Work and Pensions) shows the number of people claiming unemployment-related benefits in Oxfordshire increased slightly between November 2020 and December 2020, from 16,345 to 16,640 (+0.5%).