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Welcome Working-age population joint strategic needs assessment (JSNA) prioritisation event 25 April 2017 County Hall, Preston

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Welcome

Working-age population

joint strategic needs assessment (JSNA)

prioritisation event

25 April 2017

County Hall, Preston

Programme for the event

• Welcome and housekeeping

• Overview of working-age population in Lancashire –

the findings

• Workshop one: recommendations

• Workshop two: how to present the findings

• Feedback: what’s the one big thing…?

• Next steps and close

2

Where are we up to in the JSNA process?

Select topic ScopingIdentify working

groupCollect data

Analyse Interpret Identify priorities Review literature

Write recommendations

Consultation Publish findings Warm handover

3

What are the drivers?

• Changes to health and social care provision.

• A lack of data/intelligence around the health and wellbeing of this

population.

• Economic factors – including benefit changes, ongoing austerity

measures, different working conditions (e.g. zero hour contracts) and

financial pressures on families.

• Assets in this population.

What questions should it answer?

• What are the health behaviours of this population?

• What assets are there in the WAP?

• Are there distinctions between the different age groups within the WAP?

• What are the differences in the health and wellbeing of those who are in

work and those who are not?

5

What did we include?

General demographics

Population

Age

Gender

Ethnicity

Religion

Marital status

Deprivation

Mosaic

Economy

Employment

Unemployment

Income levels

Reasons for activity or inactivity

Occupation

Education/skills

Sector breakdown

Health behaviours

JSNA

Filtered by age,

health

conditions,

mental health

substance use,

tobacco,

alcohol, food

nutrition and

physical activity

Lancashire data

Community safety/MADE

Ambulance data

Census data

Data from other partners

Modelled estimates (from literature

review)

Other data

Literature and evidence review

What does this JSNA look

like?7

WAP final report

(with

recommendations)

Lifestyle

behaviours

Long-term

conditions

Adults aged

50+

Non-

standard

and flexible

working

Work, health

and

wellbeing

Lancashire

profile

Individual district profiles

Mapping and

background details

(including commuter

flows and asset

maps)

What are the health behaviours of this

population?

Are there distinctions between the different age

groups within the WAP?

What are the differences in the

health and wellbeing of those

who are in work and those who

are not?

National key findings

32.4 million days of sickness absence were taken due to back pain, neck and

upper limb pain, and other musculoskeletal conditions in the UK (2015)

8

29.2% of men and 44.4% of women (aged 60-64) in England

have arthritis (2015)

8.4% of employed people aged 16-24 in the north west are on a zero hours

contract (Apr-Jun14)

Working shifts for 15+ years increases the risk

of cardiovascular disease by 40%

30% of people in England aged 55-64 provide unpaid help or

support (2015)

9

457,781 of L-14 residents are female, 447,417 are

male (16-64) (2015)

Lancashire findings

Modelled figures put the unemployment rate at

3.6% (L-12) for the 16+ population (Oct15-Sept16)

42.5% of 16-19s and 69.4% of 50+ work full time

(L-14) (July 2016)

21,762 people aged 16-64 were a victim of a violent

crime (2015/16) (L-14)

10An estimated 80,000 of 16-64s have

cardiovascular disease (L-12)

60% of those aged 45-64 are obese or overweight

(self-reported weight) (L-12)

Over 76,000 people aged 45-64 are estimated to

have a MSK condition (L-14)

10.3% of L-14 residents (16+) have a limiting

long-term illness

74% of those aged 45-54 drink alcohol (L-12)

73% of those aged 55-64 drink alcohol (L-12)

11Main cause of death in the L-14 WAP (ICD-10 chapters)

1. Cancer

2. Cardiovascular disease

3. Diseases of the

digestive system

4. External causes of

morbidity and mortality

5. Diseases of the

respiratory system

6. Diseases of the nervous system7. Endocrine, nutritional and

metabolic diseases8. Certain infections and parasitic

diseases

9. Symptoms, signs and abnormal clinical and laboratory findings not elsewhere classified

10. Mental and behavioural disorders

1. Cancer

2. Cardiovascular disease

3. External causes of

morbidity and mortality

4. Diseases of the digestive

system

5. Diseases of the respiratory

system

6. Diseases of the nervous system

7. Endocrine, nutritional and

metabolic diseases

8. Certain infections and parasitic

diseases

9. Diseases of the genitourinary

system

10. Congenital malformations,

deformations and chromosomal

abnormalities

(2013-15)

12Lancashire-14 – top five causes of mortality

2,832

total

deaths

42.7%

from

cancers

15.5%

from heart

diseases

10.8%

from external

causes

10.3%

from digestive

diseases

4,182

total

deaths

32.4%

from

cancers

24.8%

from heart

diseases

13.0%

from digestive

diseases

12.7%

from external

causes

(2013-15)

13Male cancer incidence (15-64) (2012-14)

14Female cancer incidence (15-64) (2012-14)

Overarching recommendations

Support the WHO healthy settings approach

Promote health literacy

Ensure digital inclusion

16Recommendations

Themes

General Over 50’s

Healthy workplaces Healthy people

Workshop one (one hour)

1. There are four sets of recommendations on your table – one for each of the

four themes (general, over-50s, healthy people, and healthy workplaces).

2. Please discuss the first set of recommendations and consider what you can

add to them, for example, is there any good evidence-based practice you’re

aware of which supports them?

3. Rank the recommendations in order of priority (for your group). Please take

15 minutes per theme (sixty minutes in total).

4. Repeat the process for the other three sets of recommendations.

What’s the one big thing….?

18

Contact

[email protected]

Tel: 01772 536802

www.lancashire.gov.uk/lancashire-insight