We would like to use cookies to collect information about how you use ons.gov.uk.
We use this information to make the website work as well as possible and improve our services.
You’ve accepted all cookies. You can change your cookie settings at any time. Hide
We moved them to The National Archives website, to keep this website as responsive as possible.
Please note: all historical data is still on this website.
Loading search results
Dewis pwnc arall neu clirio pob hidlydd.
Decomposition analysis of changes in self-reported health between 2011 and 2021, including counts, crude rates and results from logistic regression models.
Descriptive statistics and model estimates for the change in monthly employee pay and employee status attributable to having had bariatric surgery, in different time periods after surgery, compared with six months before surgery. Includes breakdowns by age group, sex, region, ethnic group and Index of Multiple Deprivation quintile group. April 2014 to March 2022.
Evaluating the effectiveness of the human papillomavirus vaccination (HPV) programme using regression discontinuity design.
UK armed forces veteran suicide statistics in England and Wales. Including method of suicide, cause of death and suicide rate in male veterans. Annual data. These are official statistics in development.
These datasets are part of "What life looked like for different groups in England and Wales Census 2021", a release of results from the 2021 Census for England and Wales.
Underlying data used to construct the Health Index for England including indicator details.
Health Index scores for integrated care systems in England, including indicator details to construct the Index.
Health Index scores at national, regional, and upper- and lower-tier local authority level for England, including indicator details to construct the Index.
Analysis of risk factors for undiagnosed high blood pressure among adults living in private households, using the Health Survey for England 2015 to 2019.
Absence from school and employment in the UK because of health reasons and respiratory illness, including breakdowns by age, sex and work sector over time. Self-reported data from the Coronavirus (COVID-19) Infection Survey.