Understanding our local populations

30
Understanding our local populations Richard Wilson, Sandwell Primary Care Trust A presentation given at State of the Region: Implications of Population Change event, 31 March 2009. This presentation forms part of the Observatory’s ongoing State of the Region dialogue between policy makers and researchers on the theme of population change.

Transcript of Understanding our local populations

Page 1: Understanding our local populations

Understanding our local populations

Richard Wilson, Sandwell Primary Care Trust

A presentation given at State of the Region: Implications of Population Change event, 31 March

2009.

This presentation forms part of the Observatory’s ongoing State of the Region dialogue between policy makers and researchers on the theme of

population change.

Page 2: Understanding our local populations

Understanding our local populationsRichard WilsonSandwell PCT

Page 3: Understanding our local populations

Health warning

• The following presentation contains:– Dodgy, dodgier statistics– The dodgiest statistics of them all

• PROJECTIONS– Widely held views stereotypical views that

are not necessarily those of the author– It is designed to stimulate debate!

Page 4: Understanding our local populations

The chaff

• “According to Government figures, immigration at current levels will add about 7 million to the population of England by 2031 – equivalent to 7 cities the size of Birmingham.

• “In 2009 England is expected to overtake Holland as the most crowded country in Europe.

• “According to Government statistics, a new home for immigrants needs to be built every six minutes.

• “Immigration directly added a million people to the UK's population in just five years - 2003 to 2007.

• “There was a net inflow of 2.3 million people to the UK between 1991 and 2006. 8% came from the new East European members of the EU”

Page 5: Understanding our local populations

What is it all about?

Page 6: Understanding our local populations

Our population has constantly been changing

Page 7: Understanding our local populations

New wave of population movement

Page 8: Understanding our local populations

Somethings never change

Page 9: Understanding our local populations

Or do they?

Page 10: Understanding our local populations

Real problems

• Future economy– Barriers to employment for Pakistanis

and Bangladeshis– Lowest levels of education attainment

Page 11: Understanding our local populations

British Asians

10 8 6 4 2 0 2 4 6 8 10 12

<4

5-9

10-14

15-19

20-24

25-29

30-34

35-39

40-44

45-49

50-54

55-59

60-64

65-69

70-74

75-79

80-84

85-89

90+

White Asian/ Asian British: (Indian, Pakistani,Bangl.,Other Asian)

Page 12: Understanding our local populations

Black British

10 5 0 5 10 15

<4

5-9

10-14

15-19

20-24

25-29

30-34

35-39

40-44

45-49

50-54

55-59

60-64

65-69

70-74

75-79

80-84

85-89

90+

White Black/ Black British: (Black Caribbean, Black African, Other)

Page 13: Understanding our local populations

Real problems

• Future economy– Barriers to employment for Pakistanis

and Bangladeshis– Ageing population

Page 14: Understanding our local populations

Ageing population

Page 15: Understanding our local populations

Real problems

• Future economy– Barriers to employment for Pakistanis

and Bangladeshis– Ageing population

• Increasing unemployment in over 50s• Increasing isolation

Page 16: Understanding our local populations

Problem

No one single source of population data exists that can answer the question of

“who lives where?”

Page 17: Understanding our local populations

Data problems

• ONS estimates– Do not go low enough

• Super Output Area level remain experimental– Not timely enough

• Based on single points in time and nationally derived adjustments

– Not reflect the diversity of the population• Age and gender• Not ethnicity and place of birth…

Page 18: Understanding our local populations

We need

• Need to be able to understand our population:– How it is changing?– Where is the change greatest?– Which age groups are changing quickest?– What the new household/family structures?– Where are the new people coming from? – How will the changing population affect

current and future plans?

Page 19: Understanding our local populations

What would be good

• Systems that are regularly updated• Contain ethnicity, country of birth,

residential and other demographic information

• Needs to be as detailed as governance allows

• Importantly must have enough information to enable linkage or triangulation of results

Page 20: Understanding our local populations

Potential sources

• Registration systems– ONS Births and Deaths– Child health systems– School census– GP registrations– Worker registration schemes

• Management systems– Council, Health, Community Safety…

Page 21: Understanding our local populations

Newcomers

• Where do they live?• Where do they work?• Magnitude of change

– Counted them in

Page 22: Understanding our local populations

NINos to GP registrations

0

200

400

600

800

1,000

1,200

1,400

Poland Ira

q

Zimba

bwe

Iran

Somali

a

Afghan

istan

Slovak

ia

Lithu

ania

Czech

Rep

ublic

Latvi

a

Hunga

ry

Roman

ia

Estonia

Sloven

ia

Bulgari

a

Nationality

Reg

istr

atio

ns

NINO regs 07/08

GP regs 07/08

Page 23: Understanding our local populations

Newcomers

• Where do they live?• Where do they work?• Magnitude of change

– Counted them in– But can we counted them out?

Page 24: Understanding our local populations

Measurement error

• ONS Estimate of resident population– 287,000

• M-Connect GP Registrations– 319,000

Page 25: Understanding our local populations

% Difference

-15.0

-10.0

-5.0

0.0

5.0

10.0

15.0

20.0

25.0

30.0

Per

cent

age

(%)

Males Females

M-Connect higher

ONS higher

Page 26: Understanding our local populations

Government Line

Q369 Mr Clappison: … you do not accept the prediction which has been made by the Office for National Statistics, the Government Actuaries Department and the United Nations that the population of this country is going to hit 71 million within a different timescale in the case of those bodies. You do not accept that, do you, or do you?

Mr Woolas: No. Q370 Mr Clappison: No; right. Those are the figures which come from the independent Office for

National Statistics, the Government's own actuary. You are saying that they are not right. Mr Woolas: No, I am not saying that they are not right, Mr Clappison. Q371 Mr Clappison: Are you saying that the population is not going to hit 71 million by, say,

2031? Mr Woolas: That is my belief. Q372 Mr Clappison: If that is your belief, it is a very unsatisfactory situation for people who are

concerned about this issue, where there are statistics coming from an independent body and from the Government's own actuary and the Government itself is saying that they are wrong. Can you write to us and let us have your prediction for what the population

Mr Woolas: No, I cannot, because you are misinterpreting, I think deliberately. The ONS figures give an extrapolation of population based on the previous number of the last few years. I think it is three from memory. Those population figures define population as being those people who are in the country for 12 months or more. Clearly, that, therefore, includes overseas students, it includes everybody who comes into the country under the points-based system. Those people are here temporarily for up to five years. So to extrapolate and to turn that into a projection is a false logic. Secondly, my view is that, even if it were a projection, not an extrapolation, the policy measures that we are taking would avoid that increase in population.

(Minister of State for borders and immigration, Home Affairs Select Committee, 17 March)

Page 27: Understanding our local populations

Data paralysis• “As a human being, one has been endowed

with just enough intelligence to be able to see clearly how utterly inadequate that intelligence is when confronted with what exists.” (A Einstein)

• Avoiding getting transfixed on whether “it is fit for purpose?”– Aware of the limitations– At what point will they become important– The effect of possible under/over-estimation on

decisions results• Do not let the pursuit of perfection mean you

ignore the merely ok

Page 28: Understanding our local populations

Going Forward

• Not just about data– Strategic commitment– Information Sharing Protocol– Governance

• How much data do we need?• How accurate do we have to be?• How do we work together?

Page 29: Understanding our local populations

“Statistics are like a lamp post to a

drunk man, more for support

than illumination” David Brent

Page 30: Understanding our local populations

Contact details

Richard WilsonHead of Information and IntelligenceSandwell Primary Care TrustE richard.wilson@sandwell- pct.nhs.ukT 0121 612 1659Web www.sandwell- pct.nhs.uk

Stephen HowarthDeputy Chief ExecutiveWest Midlands Regional ObservatoryE [email protected] +44 (0)121 202 3258Web www.wmro.orgBlog http://wmro.wordpress.com

Rosie DayResearch AnalystWest Midlands Regional ObservatoryE [email protected] +44 (0)121 202 3286Web www.wmro.orgBlog http://wmro.wordpress.com