joint strategic needs assessment for appleton village practice
TRANSCRIPT
Joint Strategic Needs Assessment for Appleton Village Practice
By Public Health Team, Halton Borough Council
1
Reader Information
Author Samantha Wu, Jessica Scott
Contributors James Watson, Jennifer Oultram
Reviewers Ifeoma Onyia, Anna Donaldson
Number of
pages 6
Release date September 2014
Description
This Joint Strategic Needs Assessment (JSNA) provides an overview of some of the key
areas of public health need for your practice population.
The following document includes a summary of data on cancer screening and profile,
flu immunisation, CVD, COPD, obesity, alcohol, smoking and A&E admissions for your
practice. Recommendations are also made for future practice development.
Detailed practice-specific data is provided across several public health domains in the
Public Health England Practice Profile in this pack. Also included is a table of key health
indicators for your ward and an Area Forum Profile detailing socio-economic indicators
for your ward and neighbouring wards.
Please see the accompanying document ‘Joint Strategic Needs Assessment for Halton’
for how other GPs in Halton are performing. Results from other Halton practices,
national averages and targets have been included for comparison. There is also a
directory of services accessible via GP referral or for signposting patients to. If this pack
is missing, or you would like a replacement pack, please email
Contact
Dr Ifeoma Onyia
Consultant in Public Health
Halton Borough Council
Tel: 0151 511 6738
Questions &
Feedback Email: [email protected]
Related
documents
Joint Strategic Needs Assessment for Halton
http://www4.halton.gov.uk/Pages/health/JSNA.aspx
2
Executive Summary
This is the second JSNA for GP practices in Halton. The aim of collating this data is to help identify
which services are working effectively, which prevention and screening measures are used the most,
and also highlight areas where resources may need to be focused to optimise the health of the
practice population.
This GP Pack includes: Summary of the JSNA for your practice only
National General Practice Profile by Public Health England for your practice
GP Cancer Profile containing screening, referral and detection data for your practice
Area Forum Profile containing health, economic, academic and crime indicators for your
ward
Changes in health indicators for your ward
Please refer to the Halton Pack for: Summary of the JSNA for Halton Local Authority
JSNA – A Comparison of Halton Practice Profiles
Directory of Services for GP referrals and their contact details
We hope you find this JSNA useful and informative to enable positive change for your patients.
3
Appleton Village Surgery
Your practice covers a population of 10,859. Is it located in the Appleton ward which falls within the
most deprived decile in England. For full local demography, QOF domains, patient satisfaction
survey, disease prevalence estimates and admission rates, please refer to the accompanying
document in this pack – General Practice Profile by Public Health England.
Below is a summary of the JSNA with data for your practice only. For the full report which includes
tables and charts, please refer to the document ‘JSNA – A Comparison of Practice Profiles’ in the
Halton Pack.
Cancer Screening
Your cervical cancer screening rate of 75.2% was below the Halton average of 75.8%, and did not
meet the national target of 80%.
Your breast cancer screening rate of 70.1% was above the Halton average of 69.8% and exceeded
the national target of 70%.
The rate of bowel cancer screening rate was 54.3%, which was above the Halton average of 48.8%
but did not meet the national target of 60%.
Cancer Profile
Your two-week referral rate of 2,919 per 100,000 was similar to the CCG rate of 2,776 per 100,000 and higher than the England average of 2,166 per 100,000. The percentage of all two week referrals that were subsequently diagnosed with cancer (conversion rate) was 13.9%. This was higher than the CCG average of 8.1% and the England average of 10.0%. The proportion of new cancer cases treated that were referred through the two week wait route (detection rate) was 51.2%. This was higher than the CCG average of 46.7% and the England average of 47.7%. The rate of emergency hospital admissions with a diagnostic code that includes cancer was 478 per 100,000. This was similar to the CCG rate of 464 per 100,000 and the England rate of 481 per 100,000.
Flu Vaccinations
Flu vaccination in the over 65s from your practice was 70.5%, which was below the Halton average
of 73.5%, and did not meet the national target of 75%. The England average was 73.2%.
Uptake of flu vaccinations by pregnant women was 51.2% which was above the Halton average of
38.3%, but did not meet the national target of 75%. The England average was 39.8%.
The vaccination rate for at-risk patients aged under 65 was 38.5%, which was below the Halton
average of 51.9%, and did not meet the national target of 75%. The England average was 52.3%.
Vaccination uptake in children aged 2 was 52.8%, which was above the Halton average of 47.3% but
did not meet the national target of 75%. The England average was 42.6%.
4
Vaccination uptake in children aged 3 was 43.9%, which was just above the Halton average of 43.4%
but did not meet the national target of 75%. The England average was 39.6%.
Chronic Diseases
Based on QOF data from 2012/13, the CHD prevalence for your practice was 4.8%, which was higher
than the Halton average of 4.4%, and the England average of 3.3%.
In 2012/13, practice BP checks in the last 9 months were completed for 83.2% of your patients with
hypertension, which was lower than the Halton average of 90.4% and the England average of 91.1%.
Cholesterol levels were recorded as ≤5 mmol/L for 84.1% of your patients with CHD. This was above
both the Halton average of 80.6% and the national average of 80.1%.
According to QOF data from 2012/13, the prevalence of COPD for your practice was 2.2%, which was
lower than the CCG average of 2.5% but higher than the England average of 1.7%.
The rate of admissions due to COPD in 2010-2013 was 142 per 100,000 for your practice, which was
significantly lower than the Halton average of 242 per 100,000. It was also lower than the national
average of 200 per 100,000.
BMI/Obesity
QOF data from 2012/13 showed that 11.4% of adult patients registered at your practice were obese.
This was below the Halton average of 14.5% but above the national average of 10.7%.
Results from the National Child Measurement Programme for 2009-2013 showed that 24.6% of 5
year olds from Appleton ward were classed as overweight or obese. This was lower than the Halton
average of 27.3%, but higher than the England average of 22.3%.
The percentage of overweight or obese 11 year olds in Appleton ward was 38.0%, which was higher
than both the Halton average of 36.8%, and the England average of 33.3%.
Alcohol/Smoking
The rate of hospital admissions directly related to alcohol among patients from your practice
between 2011 and 2014 was 432 per 100,000. This was significantly lower than the average for
Halton which was 598 per 100,000.
In 2012/13, 88.1% of your patients had a smoking status recorded in the previous 27 months. This
was above both the Halton average of 86.1% and the England average of 86.0%.
An offer of smoking cessation support and treatment was recorded for 81.9% of eligible patients,
which was just above the Halton average of 81.6% but below the England average of 83.1%.
A&E Admissions
According to QOF figures from 2012/13, the rate of A&E admissions from your practice was 19,375
per 100,000. This was not significantly different to the Halton average of 20,610 per 100,000.
5
Recommendations
Your practice is performing better than the Halton average in a number of areas, including breast
and bowel cancer screening rates; flu vaccinations amongst pregnant women at risk and 2-3 year
olds; cholesterol levels amongst those with CHD; prevalence of - and hospital admissions due to –
COPD; registered obese adults; rate of hospital admissions directly related to alcohol; recording
smoking status and offering smokers cessation support and treatment.
Areas for further development:
Cancer Screening and Detection
o You needed to screen 59 (5.7%) more patients on the Bowel Cancer Screening
Programme in order to meet the national target of 60% uptake.
o You needed to screen 129 (4.8%) more patients on the Cervical Screening Programme in
order to meet the national target of 80% coverage.
Flu Vaccinations needed in order to meet the national target of 75% uptake:
o You needed to vaccinate 21 (23.8%) more pregnant women.
o You needed to vaccinate 24 (22.2%) more 2 year olds.
o You needed to vaccinate 38 (31.1%) more 3 year olds.
o You needed to vaccinate 96 (4.5%) more over 65s.
o You needed to vaccinate 401 (36.5%) more under 65s at risk.
Smoking
o You were 1.2% behind the England average for the percentage of patients who were
offered smoking cessation support and treatment. This equates to offering help to just
19 more smokers in your surgery.
Blood Pressure Monitoring
o You were 7.9% behind the England average for the percentage of patients with
hypertension in whom there is a record of BP in the preceding 9 months. This equates to
measuring BP for 133 more patients.
The Merseyside Screening and Immunisation Team (Public Health England) work alongside GPs to help improve screening and immunisation rates. If you’d like further advice, they can be contacted on 03442 251 295 (option 1, 3 then 2).
To receive non-clinical staff cancer education (including signs and symptom awareness and screening information for breast, bowel and cervical) and health promotion materials, including screening promotion, please contact Kerry Grimes (Health Improvement Practitioner) on 0300 029 0029.
For practice team reflection on the cancer profiles, to highlight key actions and request support (such as GP appraisal resources, clinical audit of new cancer diagnoses or urgent 2 week wait referrals), please contact Anna Murray (Primary Care Engagement Facilitator at Cancer Research UK) on 07787 000068 or [email protected].
The Halton Stop Smoking Service welcomes GP referrals for smokers wishing to quit. Nicotine
replacement therapy is offered in conjunction with group support and/or one-to-one advice.
Attendees are followed up at various intervals. Call 0300 029 0029 to refer.
NATIONAL GENERAL PRACTICE PROFILES
PROFILE FOR
APPLETON VILLAGE SURGERY2-6 APPLETON VILLAGE, WIDNES, CHESHIRE
These profiles are designed tosupport clinical commissioninggroups (CCGs), GPs and localauthorities to ensure that they areproviding and commissioningeffective and appropriatehealthcare services for their localpopulation. The tool presents arange of practice-level indicatorsdrawn from the latest availabledata, including: • local demography;• Quality and Outcomes
Framework domains;• patient satisfaction survey;• disease prevalence estimates;• admission rates
In addition to displaying individualpractice profiles, the web toolallows you to view summaryprofiles for CCGs. Each practicecan be compared with its CCGand with England, and also withthe practice in the samedeprivation decile and ‘peergroup’ (although PDF generationis limited to CCG and Englandcomparison).The profiles do not provide anexhaustive list of primary careindicators, but they do allow aconsistent approach to comparingand benchmarking acrossEngland.
The profiles have been designedas a web tool and the fullfunctionality and various charttypes such as scatter plots andtrend charts are only available viathe web version. For moreinformation consult the Userguide and FAQs via theSupporting documents link, andfor full metadata view the'Definitions' on the website.
The development of this tool hasbeen led by Public HealthEngland, Knowledge andIntelligence Team (East). Forfurther information contact:[email protected]
2013 Age Distribution
Males Age Females
Population (%)
0 02 24 4
0 to 4
5 to 9
10 to 14
15 to 19
20 to 24
25 to 29
30 to 34
35 to 39
40 to 44
45 to 49
50 to 54
55 to 59
60 to 64
65 to 69
70 to 74
75 to 79
80 to 84
85+
England CCG
Registered PersonsAPPLETON VILLAGE SURGERY 10,859
NHS Halton CCG 7,566 (average)
England 7,041 (average)
DeprivationFourth more deprived decile
4
More deprived Less deprived
QOF achievement 961.6 (out of 1000)Male life expectancy 75.3 years
Female life expectancy 79.4 years% of patients that would
recommend their practice56.7%
Ethnicity Estimate0.8% non-white ethnic groups
http://fingertips.phe.org.uk/profile/general-practice
CCG - N81035 - APPLETON VILLAGE SURGERY Date created: Tue 12 Aug 2014 1
How to read the indicator spine charts
The light grey bar shows therange of values found inEngland. The dark greysections mark out the rangewithin which the middle half ofthe observed values lie (25th to75th percentile).
The red line shows where theEngland average is. Theposition of the circle shows thepractice value, a triangle theCCG value, in relation to thisscale.
The corresponding numberscan be found in the cells next tothe chart.
If significance has beencalculated for the indicator, thenit is determined by whether thepractice value is significantlyhigher or lower than theEngland average usually using99.8% confidence intervals.
No significant difference fromEngland averageSignificantly different fromEngland averageSignificance not calculated
PracticeClinical Commissioning Group
England Lowest England Average England Highest
25th Percentile 75th Percentile
Practice SummaryIndicator Period Prac.
ValueCCG
ValueEng.Ave.
Eng.Low.
England Range Eng.High.
% aged 0 to 4 years 2013 4.9% 6.2% 6.0% 0.0% 16.4%
% aged 5 to 14 years 2013 10.7% 11.8% 11.2% 0.0% 29.8%
% aged under 18 years 2013 19.0% 21.6% 20.8% 0.1% 53.9%
% aged 65+ years 2013 18.9% 15.3% 16.7% 0.0% 48.4%
% aged 75+ years 2013 8.3% 6.4% 7.7% 0.0% 26.8%
% aged 85+ years 2013 2.0% 1.6% 2.2% 0.0% 9.7%
Deprivation score (IMD) 2012 26.7 33.2 21.5 2.9 68.4
IDACI (Income Deprivation AffectingChildren)
2012 19.0% 27.0% 21.8% 1.0% 68.0%
IDAOPI (Income DeprivationAffecting Older People)
2012 20.0% 24.6% 18.1% 4.0% 80.0%
% who would recommend practice 2012/13 56.7% 75.5% 79.9% 23.8% 100%
% satisfied with phone access 2012/13 35.1% 60.5% 75.0% 11.2% 100%
% satisfied with opening hours 2012/13 75.9% 80.2% 79.6% 37.9% 100%
% who saw/spoke to nurse or GPsame or next day
2012/13 56.8% 53.9% 49.4% 9.9% 98.9%
% reporting good overall experienceof making appointment
2012/13 55.0% 67.7% 76.3% 20.4% 100%
% who know how to contact anout-of-hours GP service
2012/13 71.7% 60.6% 57.6% 14.6% 90.4%
% with a long-standing healthcondition
2012/13 56.2% 58.2% 53.5% 8.3% 83.0%
% with health-related problems indaily life
2011/12 58.0% 56.9% 48.7% 12.8% 95.5%
% with caring responsibility 2012/13 28.9% 22.3% 18.6% 0.0% 39.6%
Disability allowance claimants (per1000)
Nov2011
72.1 83.2 48.3 8.7 235.1
Nursing home patients 2010/11 0.6% 0.5% 0.5% 0.0% 21.9%
Working status - Paid work orfull-time education
2012/13 55.7% 57.8% 60.7% 10.3% 100%
Working status - Unemployed 2012/13 3.9% 7.1% 5.6% 0.0% 62.2%
Total QOF points 2012/13 96.2% 96.8% 96.1% 28.6% 100%
CCG - N81035 - APPLETON VILLAGE SURGERY Date created: Tue 12 Aug 2014 2
Modelled Disease PrevalenceIndicator Period Prac.
ValueCCG
ValueEng.Ave.
Eng.Low.
England Range Eng.High.
Estimated prevalence of CVD (allages)
2011 10.2% 9.7% 9.5% 2.6% 19.4%
Estimated prevalence of CHD (allages)
2011 5.4% 5.4% 4.7% 0.0% 12.9%
Ratio of recorded vs expected CHDprevalence
2010/11 0.83 0.72 0.00 2.72
Estimated prevalence of COPD (allages)
2011 2.97% 2.84% 2.91% 0.62% 6.47%
Ratio of recorded vs expected COPDprevalence
2010/11 0.73 0.56 0.00 2.54
Estimated prevalence ofhypertension (all ages)
2011 27.0% 25.1% 24.9% 4.2% 44.7%
Ratio of recorded vs expectedhypertension prevalence
2010/11 0.55 0.54 0.01 1.61
Estimated prevalence of stroke (allages)
2011 2.27% 2.24% 2.07% 0.16% 5.44%
Ratio of recorded vs expected strokeprevalence
2010/11 0.78 0.83 0.00 2.84
CVD - Coronary heart diseaseIndicator Period Prac.
ValueCCG
ValueEng.Ave.
Eng.Low.
England Range Eng.High.
CHD: QOF prevalence (all ages) 2012/13 4.8% 4.4% 3.3% 0.0% 9.1%
Estimated prevalence of CHD (allages)
2011 5.4% 5.4% 4.7% 0.0% 12.9%
Ratio of recorded vs expected CHDprevalence
2010/11 0.83 0.72 0.00 2.72
Heart failure w LVD: QOF prevalence 2012/13 0.5% 0.6% 0.4% 0.0% 2.5%
Exception rate for CHD indicators 2012/13 11.3% 10.3% 9.5% 0.0% 54.5%
CHD emergency admissions (per 100patients on register)
2010/11 8.3 9.8 7.1 0.0 100.0
CHD elective admissions (per 100patients on register)
2010/11 3.7 5.2 5.3 0.0 57.1
CHD 6: Last BP reading in last15mths is <=150/90
2012/13 88.4% 90.7% 90.6% 0.0% 100%
CHD 8: Last total cholesterol is<=5mmol/l
2012/13 84.1% 80.6% 80.1% 0.0% 100%
CHD 9: Record that aspirin, APT orACT is taken
2012/13 92.6% 93.4% 93.3% 67.6% 100%
CHD 10: Currently treated with betablocker
2012/13 68.9% 75.3% 76.3% 43.8% 100%
CHD 12: CHD patients given fluimmunisation 1 Sep - 31 Mar
2012/13 92.1% 88.3% 92.2% 0.0% 100%
CHD 14: History of MI: treated withACE-I
2012/13 90.0% 87.0% 88.2% 0.0% 100%
CCG - N81035 - APPLETON VILLAGE SURGERY Date created: Tue 12 Aug 2014 3
CVD - Stroke and TIAIndicator Period Prac.
ValueCCG
ValueEng.Ave.
Eng.Low.
England Range Eng.High.
Stroke: QOF prevalence (all ages) 2012/13 1.9% 1.8% 1.7% 0.0% 6.5%
Estimated prevalence of stroke (allages)
2011 2.27% 2.24% 2.07% 0.16% 5.44%
Ratio of recorded vs expected strokeprevalence
2010/11 0.78 0.83 0.00 2.84
Exception rate for stroke indicators 2012/13 7.3% 7.1% 7.7% 0.0% 75.0%
Stroke 13: New patients referred forfurther investigation
2012/13 80.0% 88.1% 88.7% 0.0% 100%
Stroke 6: Last BP reading is 150/90or less
2012/13 84.7% 89.3% 89.3% 40.0% 100%
PAD 3: last blood pressure reading(last 15 mnths) <=150/90
2012/13 92.6% 87.7% 89.6% 0.0% 100%
Stroke 7: Total cholesterol recordedin last 15mths
2012/13 80.8% 89.6% 91.0% 0.0% 100%
PAD 4: last total cholesterolmeasurement (last 15 mnths) <= 5.0mmol/l
2012/13 84.2% 79.4% 79.9% 0.0% 100%
Stroke 8: Last measured totalcholesterol <=5mmol/l
2012/13 65.4% 77.1% 77.3% 0.0% 100%
Stroke 12: Record of aspirin, APT orACT taken
2012/13 92.0% 94.0% 93.8% 0.0% 100%
PAD 2: record of aspirin being taken(last 15 mnth)
2012/13 94.4% 90.2% 90.4% 0.0% 100%
Stroke 10: Influenza immunisationgiven 1 Sep-31 Mar
2012/13 87.1% 87.3% 89.7% 0.0% 100%
CVD - Heart failure and atrial fibrillationIndicator Period Prac.
ValueCCG
ValueEng.Ave.
Eng.Low.
England Range Eng.High.
Heart Failure: QOF prevalence (allages)
2012/13 1.1% 0.8% 0.7% 0.0% 3.9%
Heart failure w LVD: QOF prevalence 2012/13 0.5% 0.6% 0.4% 0.0% 2.5%
Exception rate for heart failureindicators
2012/13 13.8% 11.8% 12.0% 0.0% 100%
Atrial fibrillation: QOF prevalence 2012/13 2.3% 1.7% 1.5% 0.0% 5.1%
Exception rate for atrial fibrillationindicators
2012/13 9.8% 8.9% 8.2% 0.0% 100%
HF 2: Diagnosis conf. byECG/specialist assessm.
2012/13 92.7% 96.1% 95.3% 0.0% 100%
HF 3: HF w LVD: treated with ACE-Ior ARB
2012/13 84.9% 86.4% 89.7% 0.0% 100%
HF 4: Heart failure w LVD: treatmentw ACE inh. or ARB, and beta-blocker
2012/13 83.3% 90.5% 86.7% 0.0% 100%
AF 5: stroke risk assessed withCHADS2 (last 15 mnths)
2012/13 94.1% 96.1% 97.2% 0.0% 100%
AF 6: treated w anti-coag./platelettherapy (if CHADS2 =1)
2012/13 92.6% 93.8% 95.1% 0.0% 100%
AF 7: treated w anti-coag. therapy(CHADS2 >1)
2012/13 71.2% 77.2% 81.3% 0.0% 100%
CCG - N81035 - APPLETON VILLAGE SURGERY Date created: Tue 12 Aug 2014 4
CVD - Risk factors for CVDIndicator Period Prac.
ValueCCG
ValueEng.Ave.
Eng.Low.
England Range Eng.High.
Hypertension: QOF prevalence (allages)
2012/13 15.9% 14.8% 13.7% 0.0% 36.1%
Estimated prevalence ofhypertension (all ages)
2011 27.0% 25.1% 24.9% 4.2% 44.7%
Ratio of recorded vs expectedhypertension prevalence
2010/11 0.55 0.54 0.01 1.61
Exception rate for hypertensionindicators
2012/13 3.7% 3.1% 2.8% 0.0% 100%
Exception rate for smoking indicators 2012/13 0.3% 0.3% 0.6% 0.0% 10.4%
Exception rate for CVD primaryprevention indicators
2012/13 4.9% 6.2% 6.2% 0.0% 85.9%
Obesity: QOF prevalence (16+) 2012/13 11.4% 14.5% 10.7% 0.0% 43.3%
GP patient survey: smokingprevalence
2012/13 25.1% 21.1% 18.1% 0.0% 84.9%
GP patient survey: ex-smokingprevalence
2012/13 29.6% 26.7% 27.3% 0.7% 47.0%
BP 4: Record of BP in last 9mths 2012/13 83.2% 90.4% 91.1% 57.5% 100%
BP 5: Last (9mths) blood pressure<=150/90
2012/13 67.9% 79.2% 80.8% 43.2% 100%
PP 1: CV risk assessment for newhypertension cases
2012/13 83.9% 84.7% 82.3% 0.0% 100%
PP 2: Lifestyle advice for newhypertension cases
2012/13 100% 85.3% 83.2% 0.0% 100%
Dep 1: Depression case finding inCHD and/or diabetes patients
2012/13 87.9% 88.8% 88.3% 0.4% 100%
Smoking 5: status recorded in last 15mths (certain conditions)
2012/13 93.9% 96.0% 95.8% 74.7% 100%
Smoking 6: cessation support andtreatment offered (certain conditions)
2012/13 94.0% 91.6% 93.3% 10.5% 100%
Smoking 7: record of smoking statusin last 27 months (15+ y)
2012/13 88.1% 86.1% 86.0% 54.0% 100%
Smoking 8: record of offer of supportand treatment (15+ y)
2012/13 81.9% 81.6% 83.1% 5.2% 100%
CCG - N81035 - APPLETON VILLAGE SURGERY Date created: Tue 12 Aug 2014 5
DiabetesIndicator Period Prac.
ValueCCG
ValueEng.Ave.
Eng.Low.
England Range Eng.High.
Diabetes: QOF prevalence (17+) 2012/13 7.0% 7.2% 6.0% 0.3% 18.5%
Exception rate for diabetes indicators 2012/13 7.0% 6.9% 7.1% 0.3% 45.9%
Hypertension: QOF prevalence (allages)
2012/13 15.9% 14.8% 13.7% 0.0% 36.1%
Exception rate for hypertensionindicators
2012/13 3.7% 3.1% 2.8% 0.0% 100%
Exception rate for smoking indicators 2012/13 0.3% 0.3% 0.6% 0.0% 10.4%
Obesity: QOF prevalence (16+) 2012/13 11.4% 14.5% 10.7% 0.0% 43.3%
Diabetes admissions (per 1000) 2010/11 1.7 2.2 1.1 0.0 11.5
Ratio of recorded vs expecteddiabetes prevalence
2008/09 0.9 0.9 0.0 5.8
DM 2: Record of BMI in the last15mths
2012/13 92.9% 95.1% 94.6% 33.9% 100%
DM 26: Last HbA1c is <=7.5% in last15mths
2012/13 66.7% 69.8% 66.5% 19.7% 100%
DM 27: Last HbA1c is <=8% in last15mths
2012/13 75.2% 77.6% 75.4% 30.6% 100%
DM 28: Last HbA1c is <=9% in last15mths
2012/13 85.0% 87.3% 86.4% 32.9% 100%
DM 21: Retinal screening in last15mths
2012/13 98.0% 93.3% 91.7% 28.7% 100%
DM 29: Record of peripheral pulseslast 15mths
2012/13 87.8% 90.8% 90.4% 0.0% 100%
DM 10: Record of neuropathy testlast 15mths
2012/13 87.9% 91.2% 90.9% 8.0% 100%
DM 30: Last BP is <=150/90 2012/13 84.5% 90.1% 90.4% 61.5% 100%
DM 31: Last BP is <=140/80 2012/13 60.5% 72.8% 72.9% 28.4% 100%
DM 13: Record of micro-albuminuriatest last 15mths
2012/13 91.0% 88.2% 88.0% 1.7% 100%
DM 22: eGFR or serum creatinintesting in last 15mths
2012/13 94.9% 96.3% 96.7% 68.6% 100%
DM 15: Proteinuria/micro-album.treated w inhibitors
2012/13 90.5% 87.0% 86.8% 0.0% 100%
DM 17: Measured total chol (last15mths) <=5mmol/l
2012/13 80.7% 80.2% 81.2% 40.9% 100%
DM 18: Influenza immunisation given1 Sep - 31 Mar
2012/13 90.6% 87.8% 90.0% 0.0% 100%
Dep 1: Depression case finding inCHD and/or diabetes patients
2012/13 87.9% 88.8% 88.3% 0.4% 100%
Smoking 5: status recorded in last 15mths (certain conditions)
2012/13 93.9% 96.0% 95.8% 74.7% 100%
Smoking 6: cessation support andtreatment offered (certain conditions)
2012/13 94.0% 91.6% 93.3% 10.5% 100%
CCG - N81035 - APPLETON VILLAGE SURGERY Date created: Tue 12 Aug 2014 6
Mental HealthIndicator Period Prac.
ValueCCG
ValueEng.Ave.
Eng.Low.
England Range Eng.High.
Mental Health: QOF prevalence (allages)
2012/13 0.59% 0.78% 0.8% 0.1% 18.0%
Dementia: QOF prevalence (all ages) 2012/13 0.6% 0.6% 0.6% 0.0% 9.6%
% reporting Alzheimer's disease ordementia
2012/13 0.6% 0.6% 0.5% 0.0% 6.1%
Exception rate for dementiaindicators
2012/13 14.8% 10.2% 12.2% 0.0% 100%
Depression: QOF prevalence (18+) 2012/13 11.2% 6.0% 5.8% 0.0% 25.6%
Exception rate for depressionindicators
2012/13 5.0% 3.7% 5.3% 0.0% 41.5%
% reporting a long-term mentalhealth problem
2012/13 5.8% 7.2% 4.5% 0.0% 52.5%
MH 10: comprehensive care plan 2012/13 94.6% 90.1% 87.3% 0.0% 100%
MH 11: record of alcoholconsumption
2012/13 96.0% 93.1% 90.9% 0.0% 100%
MH 12: record of BMI 2012/13 98.0% 92.1% 89.5% 10.0% 100%
MH 13: record of blood pressure 2012/13 100% 94.2% 92.0% 33.3% 100%
MH 16: record of cervical screeningtest
2012/13 100% 88.3% 88.5% 0.0% 100%
MH 17: Li-therapy: record of s.creat.& TSH last 9mths
2012/13 100% 96.8% 95.9% 0.0% 100%
MH 18: Lithium therapy: record ofLi-levels last 4mths
2012/13 90.9% 83.5% 88.9% 0.0% 100%
MH 19: record of cholesterol:hdl ratio 2012/13 83.3% 83.5% 81.7% 0.0% 100%
MH 20: record of blood glucose orHbA1c in last 15 months
2012/13 91.7% 89.5% 86.7% 0.0% 100%
DEM 2: Dementia care has beenreviewed last 15mths
2012/13 83.3% 84.3% 83.2% 0.0% 100%
DEM 4: Blood tests recorded 2012/13 77.8% 69.4% 76.6% 0.0% 100%
Dep 1: Depression case finding inCHD and/or diabetes patients
2012/13 87.9% 88.8% 88.3% 0.4% 100%
Dep 6: Depression cases withseverity assessment
2012/13 97.0% 92.9% 90.6% 0.0% 100%
Dep 7: Depression cases withsecond assessment of severity
2012/13 59.5% 71.4% 75.4% 0.0% 100%
CCG - N81035 - APPLETON VILLAGE SURGERY Date created: Tue 12 Aug 2014 7
Respiratory DiseaseIndicator Period Prac.
ValueCCG
ValueEng.Ave.
Eng.Low.
England Range Eng.High.
COPD: QOF prevalence (all ages) 2012/13 2.2% 2.5% 1.7% 0.0% 8.2%
Estimated prevalence of COPD (allages)
2011 2.97% 2.84% 2.91% 0.62% 6.47%
Ratio of recorded vs expected COPDprevalence
2010/11 0.73 0.56 0.00 2.54
Exception rate for COPD indicators 2012/13 15.9% 13.3% 11.6% 0.0% 100%
COPD admissions (per 1000) 2010/11 1.4 3.6 2.1 0.0 16.2
Asthma: QOF prevalence (all ages) 2012/13 6.5% 6.9% 6.0% 0.0% 13.7%
Exception rate for asthma indicators 2012/13 3.1% 9.5% 6.6% 0.0% 100%
Exception rate for smoking indicators 2012/13 0.3% 0.3% 0.6% 0.0% 10.4%
GP patient survey: smokingprevalence
2012/13 25.1% 21.1% 18.1% 0.0% 84.9%
GP patient survey: ex-smokingprevalence
2012/13 29.6% 26.7% 27.3% 0.7% 47.0%
COPD 8: Influenza immunisationgiven 1 Sep - 31 Mar
2012/13 88.9% 89.8% 92.7% 0.0% 100%
COPD 10: Record of FEV1 in last15mths
2012/13 80.5% 89.4% 88.4% 0.0% 100%
COPD 13: assessed using MRCdyspnoea score last 15mths
2012/13 97.0% 94.2% 91.1% 0.0% 100%
COPD 15: Diagnosis conf. byspirometry
2012/13 97.2% 93.6% 91.3% 0.0% 100%
Asthma 8: with measures ofvariability/reversibility (8+)
2012/13 83.1% 90.5% 87.6% 16.7% 100%
Asthma 9: review in the last 15months (incl. an assessment usingthe 3 RCP questions)
2012/13 71.1% 76.1% 74.8% 0.0% 100%
Asthma 10: smoking recorded in last15 mths (14-19y w asthma)
2012/13 100% 88.9% 89.3% 0.0% 100%
Smoking 5: status recorded in last 15mths (certain conditions)
2012/13 93.9% 96.0% 95.8% 74.7% 100%
Smoking 6: cessation support andtreatment offered (certain conditions)
2012/13 94.0% 91.6% 93.3% 10.5% 100%
Smoking 7: record of smoking statusin last 27 months (15+ y)
2012/13 88.1% 86.1% 86.0% 54.0% 100%
Smoking 8: record of offer of supportand treatment (15+ y)
2012/13 81.9% 81.6% 83.1% 5.2% 100%
Uptake seasonal flu vaccine (65+) 2010/11 71.1% 72.8% 9.0% 99.4%
Uptake seasonal infuenza vaccine (6months to 64 years old)
2010/11 47.4% 50.4% 3.0% 100%
CCG - N81035 - APPLETON VILLAGE SURGERY Date created: Tue 12 Aug 2014 8
Chronic Kidney DiseaseIndicator Period Prac.
ValueCCG
ValueEng.Ave.
Eng.Low.
England Range Eng.High.
CKD: QOF prevalence (18+) 2012/13 5.0% 4.5% 4.3% 0.0% 24.1%
Exception rate for CKD indicators 2012/13 5.2% 2.2% 3.6% 0.0% 100%
CKD 2: Record of BP in last 15mths 2012/13 98.2% 97.5% 97.1% 60.0% 100%
CKD 3: Last BP reading measured inlast 15mths is <=140/85
2012/13 72.8% 75.7% 76.2% 0.0% 100%
CKD 5: Hypertension treated withACE inhibitor/ARB
2012/13 100% 88.9% 89.3% 0.0% 100%
CKD 6: Urine albumin:creatinine ratiotest last 15mths
2012/13 85.5% 81.9% 81.8% 0.0% 100%
CCG - N81035 - APPLETON VILLAGE SURGERY Date created: Tue 12 Aug 2014 9
Other ConditionsIndicator Period Prac.
ValueCCG
ValueEng.Ave.
Eng.Low.
England Range Eng.High.
Cancer: QOF prevalence (all ages) 2012/13 2.7% 1.9% 1.9% 0.0% 5.5%
Exception rate for cancer indicators 2012/13 0.0% 0.5% 1.5% 0.0% 100%
Cancer admissions (per 1000) 2010/11 23.9 22.4 28.6 0.0 97.0
Cancer 3: review within 6mths ofdiagnosis
2012/13 92.0% 95.5% 93.2% 0.0% 100%
% reporting cancer in the last 5 years 2012/13 3.6% 3.3% 3.1% 0.0% 12.5%
Epilepsy: QOF prevalence (18+) 2012/13 1.0% 0.9% 0.8% 0.1% 4.0%
Exception rate for epilepsy indicators 2012/13 20.0% 19.2% 14.0% 0.0% 70.0%
Epilepsy 6: Record of seizurefrequency
2012/13 96.3% 95.0% 94.8% 0.0% 100%
Epilepsy 8: Seizure free for last12mths
2012/13 75.9% 75.1% 75.4% 0.0% 100%
Epilepsy 9: Contraception,conception and pregnancy
2012/13 93.8% 94.9% 93.5% 0.0% 100%
Learning disability: QOF prevalence(18+)
2012/13 0.6% 0.7% 0.5% 0.0% 5.6%
% reporting learning difficulty 2012/13 0.6% 1.3% 1.3% 0.0% 14.8%
LD 2: Down�s Syndrome with bloodTSH record
2012/13 100% 84.4% 92.3% 0.0% 100%
Hypothyroidism: QOF prevalence (allages)
2012/13 2.9% 2.8% 3.2% 0.2% 8.5%
Exception rate for hypothyroidismindicators
2012/13 0.3% 0.2% 0.5% 0.0% 40.0%
Thyroid 2: function test recorded last15mths
2012/13 90.4% 94.3% 95.7% 60.0% 100%
Palliative/supportive care: QOFprevalence (all ages)
2012/13 0.3% 0.3% 0.2% 0.0% 3.3%
% reporting blindness or severevisual impairment
2012/13 1.1% 0.9% 1.1% 0.0% 9.2%
% reporting deafness or severehearing impairment
2012/13 5.2% 4.9% 4.0% 0.0% 14.5%
% reporting a long-term backproblem
2012/13 14.3% 12.1% 10.2% 0.0% 32.9%
% reporting arthritis or long-term jointproblem
2012/13 19.8% 17.2% 13.1% 0.0% 36.1%
Osteoporosis: QOF prevalence (50+) 2012/13 0.2 0.2 0.2 0.0 13.5
OST 2: currently treated with abone-sparing agent (50-74 yrs)
2012/13 100% 91.7% 97.1% 0.0% 100%
OST 3: Patients (75+ yrs) with afragility fracture treated withbone-sparing agent
2012/13 83.3% 86.4% 84.4% 0.0% 100%
CCG - N81035 - APPLETON VILLAGE SURGERY Date created: Tue 12 Aug 2014 10
Secondary Care Use - OutpatientsIndicator Period Prac.
ValueCCG
ValueEng.Ave.
Eng.Low.
England Range Eng.High.
All outpatient attendances (per 1000) 2010/11 986 886 853 150 2541
Total outpatient appointmentexpenditure per registered population
2010 108 96 92 16 222
First outpatient appointment (per1000)
2010 377 359 347 72 1077
First outpatient appointmentexpenditure per registered population
2010 44 43 43 8 139
GP referrals to outpatients - 1stattendance (per 1000)
2010/11 212 202 192 30 557
Follow-ups to first outpatientappointments (per 1000)
2010 690 591 550 78 1384
Outpatients discharged at 1stappointment (per 1000)
2010 156 150 110 6 583
DNA: Rate of total outpatientappointments (per 1000)
2010 257 215 191 3 846
DNA: proportion of total 1stoutpatient appointments
2010/11 0.0% 3.0% 7.0% 0.0% 34.7%
GP referrals to General Medicine -1st attendance (per 1000)
2010/11 16.7 14.8 10.8 0.0 87.4
General Medicine - return ratio 2010/11 3.5 2.5 0.0 17.2
GP referrals to General Surgery - 1stattendance (per 1000)
2010/11 28 32 24 2 71
General Surgery - return ratio 2010/11 1.60 1.40 0.00 4.90
GP referrals to Gynaecology - 1stattendance (per 1000)
2010/11 21 20 17 0 80
Gynaecology - return ratio 2010/11 1.6 1.2 0.0 4.2
GP referrals to Orthopaedics - 1stattendance (per 1000)
2010/11 19 15 21 1 100
Orthopaedics - return ratio 2010/11 2.00 1.80 0.50 3.80
GP Referrals to Urology - 1stattendance (per 1000)
2010/11 11.2 9.5 8.0 0.0 27.4
Urology - return ratio 2010/11 2.8 2.2 0.0 15.0
GP referrals to Paediatrics - 1stattendance (per 1000)
2010/11 4.8 5.7 6.2 0.0 78.9
GP referrals to Dermatology - 1stattendance (per 1000)
2010/11 19.2 16.4 13.9 0.4 56.1
CCG - N81035 - APPLETON VILLAGE SURGERY Date created: Tue 12 Aug 2014 11
Secondary Care Use - A&E and InpatientsIndicator Period Prac.
ValueCCG
ValueEng.Ave.
Eng.Low.
England Range Eng.High.
A&E attendances (per 1000) 2010/11 264 343 387 14 1519
A&E admissions (per 1000) 2010/11 26 24 10 0 199
A&E attendances with primarydiagnosis recorded
2010/11 62.1% 30.6% 59.8% 1.0% 100%
A&E referrals (weighted) 2010 9.8 7.5 16.8 0.0 398.4
Total admissions (per 1000) 2010/11 270 281 235 11 585
Elective admissions (per 1000) 2010/11 139 128 121 6 327
Emergency admissions (per 1000) 2010/11 109 123 89 4 440
Elective inpatient admissions (per1000)
2010/11 32.2 28.7 25.6 0.0 78.3
Day case admissions (per 1000) 2010/11 107.2 99.0 93.2 4.9 277.5
Long term conditions emergency beddays (per 1000)
2010/11 466 596 470 21 2544
Average emergency overnightoccupied beds (per 1000)
2010/11 1.2 1.5 1.2 0.0 3.5
CHD total admissions (per 1000) 2010/11 5.4 6.2 4.6 0.0 17.1
CHD elective admissions (per 100patients on register)
2010/11 3.7 5.2 5.3 0.0 57.1
CHD emergency admissions (per 100patients on register)
2010/11 8.3 9.8 7.1 0.0 100.0
Respiratory disease admissions (per1000)
2010/11 21 22 17 1 61
Diabetes admissions (per 1000) 2010/11 1.7 2.2 1.1 0.0 11.5
COPD admissions (per 1000) 2010/11 1.4 3.6 2.1 0.0 16.2
Cancer admissions (per 1000) 2010/11 23.9 22.4 28.6 0.0 97.0
Admissions for long term neurologicalconditions (per 1000)
2011/12 6.9 5.9 5.7 0.0 35.8
Emergency admissions for chronicconditions (per 1000)
2010/11 18.4 22.8 15.0 0.7 67.4
Total admissions expenditure (£ perpatient)
2010 378 390 333 32 770
Expenditure on elective admissions(£ per patient)
2010 163 144 137 0 319
Expenditure on emergencyadmissions (£ per patient)
2010 180 205 157 14 579
CCG - N81035 - APPLETON VILLAGE SURGERY Date created: Tue 12 Aug 2014 12
Indicators for Needs AssessmentIndicator Period Prac.
ValueCCG
ValueEng.Ave.
Eng.Low.
England Range Eng.High.
Life expectancy - MSOA basedestimate (Female)
2006 -10
79.4 82.3 75.1 91.0
Fertility rate (MSOA based) 2006 -10
63.4 63.1 12.0 134.3
Low birthweight births - MSOA basedestimate
2006 -10
7.8% 7.5% 2.4% 13.0%
All cause elective standardisedadmission ratio (MSOA based)
2006/07- 10/11
101.2 100.0 47.7 174.8
All cause emergency standardisedadmission ratio (MSOA based)
2006/07- 10/11
152.0 100.0 43.8 235.2
CHD elective standardised admissionratio (MSOA based)
2006/07- 10/11
126.9 100.0 32.6 293.5
CHD emergency standardisedadmission ratio (MSOA based)
2006/07- 10/11
148.5 100.0 40.2 376.0
Stroke emergency standardisedadmission ratio (MSOA based)
2006/07- 10/11
110.4 100.0 43.3 212.3
COPD emergency standardisedadmission ratio (MSOA based)
2006/07- 10/11
146.7 100.0 17.7 541.8
Limiting long-term illness (MSOAbased)
2009 19.7% 16.9% 6.0% 32.0%
Long term unemployment (MSOAbased)
2010/11 5.4 6.0 0.1 40.8
Healthy eating adults (MSOA based) 2006 -08
24.1% 28.7% 13.8% 54.1%
Prevalence of adults who binge drink 2007 -08
22.1% 20.0% 4.3% 50.4%
Standardised admission ratio foralcohol attributable harm (MSOAbased)
2006/07- 10/11
100.0 34.0 273.7
Prevalence of obese adults 2006 -08
25.1% 24.2% 9.6% 33.8%
Incidence of all cancers (MSOAbased)
2005 -09
115.5 100.0 66.7 147.0
Cancer mortality age <75 (MSOAbased)
2006 -10
129.5 100.0 37.2 205.3
Circulatory disease mortality age <75(MSOA based)
2006 -10
127.2 100.0 26.8 265.8
CCG - N81035 - APPLETON VILLAGE SURGERY Date created: Tue 12 Aug 2014 13
Child healthIndicator Period Prac.
ValueCCG
ValueEng.Ave.
Eng.Low.
England Range Eng.High.
% aged 0 to 4 years 2013 4.9% 6.2% 6.0% 0.0% 16.4%
% aged 5 to 14 years 2013 10.7% 11.8% 11.2% 0.0% 29.8%
% aged under 18 years 2013 19.0% 21.6% 20.8% 0.1% 53.9%
IDACI (Income Deprivation AffectingChildren)
2012 19.0% 27.0% 21.8% 1.0% 68.0%
Fertility rate (MSOA based) 2006 -10
63.4 68.3 63.1 12.0 134.3
Low birthweight births - MSOA basedestimate
2006 -10
7.8% 8.1% 7.5% 2.4% 13.0%
A&E attendances (0-4) 2009/10- 11/12
515 526 488 16 2282
A&E attendances (5-17) 2009/10- 11/12
267 349 287 4 1209
A&E attendances (<18) 2009/10- 11/12
334 398 345 6 1423
Elective hospital admissions for allcauses (<18)
2009/10- 11/12
45.4 45.0 47.3 0.0 245.2
Emergency hospital admissions forall causes (<18)
2009/10- 11/12
105.0 93.3 67.6 2.1 261.3
Emergency respiratory admissions(<18)
2007/08- 11/12
5.7 4.7 3.6 0.0 16.1
Emergency gastroenteritisadmissions (0-4)
2007/08- 11/12
25.0 18.7 11.8 0.0 70.7
Emergency admissions for asthma, diabetes or epilepsy (<18)
2007/08- 11/12
4.4 4.6 3.5 0.0 35.2
Admissions due to injury (<18) 2009/10- 11/12
14.3 16.3 12.1 0.0 34.8
Outpatient first attendances (<18) 2009/10- 11/12
222 210 226 5 948
Ratio of first to follow-up outpatientattendances (<18)
2009/10- 11/12
0.4 0.5 0.5 0.2 3.2
DNA rate for outpatient appointments(<18)
2009/10- 11/12
9.8% 13.6% 12.3% 0.6% 50.0%
CCG - N81035 - APPLETON VILLAGE SURGERY Date created: Tue 12 Aug 2014 14
General Practice Profile File is significantly different from CCG mean
File is not significantly different from CCG mean
Statistical significance cannot be assessed
England mean
CCG Median
¦Lowest inCCG
25thPercentile
75thHighest in
CCG
Schofield + Brindle (N81035) (Practice:N81035)
2013 NHS Halton CCG (01F)
File population (2013): 10,859CCG population (2013): 128,661All File population (2013): 55,948,304
Practice rates or proportion in CCG/PCT
Section # IndicatorPracticeindicator
value
Practiceindicator rateor proportion
Lower 95%Confidence
Limit
Upper 95%Confidence
Limit
CCG/PCTmean England
mean
LowestPractice Range
HighestPractice Source Period
De
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Ca
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rscre
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Ca
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rW
aitin
gT
ime
sP
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nta
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Dia
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ostics
1 Practice Population aged 65+ (% of population in this practice aged 65+) 2045 18.9 % 18.2 % 19.6 % 15.3 % 16.7 % 6.7 % ¦ 19.0 % ADS April 2013
2 Socio-economic deprivation, "Quintile 1" = affluent (% of population income deprived) Quintile4 15.4 % 14.7 % 16.1 % 20.6 % 15.1 % 8.0 % ¦ 30.1 % APHO 2010
3 New cancer cases (Crude incidence rate: new cases per 100,000 population) 53 488 366 638 492 479 371 ¦ 648 NCIN/UKACR 2011
4 Cancer deaths (Crude mortality rate: deaths per 100,000 population) 29 267 179 384 245 230 161 ¦ 368 PCMD 2011/12
5 Prevalent cancer cases (% of practice population on practice cancer register) 296 2.7 % 2.4 % 3.0 % 1.9 % 1.9 % 0.9 % ¦ 2.7 % QOF 2012/2013
6 Females, 50-70, screened for breast cancer in last 36 months (3 year coverage, %) 1110 70.1 % 67.8 % 72.3 % 69.8 % 72.1 % 57.6 % ¦ 78.5 % Open Exeter 2012/2013
7 Females, 50-70, screened for breast cancer within 6 months of invitation (Uptake, %) < 6 < 6 n/a n/a 66.8 % 73.3 % 53.1 % ¦ 77.8 % Open Exeter 2012/2013
8 Females, 25-64, attending cervical screening within target period (3.5 or 5.5 year coverage, %) 1925 71.6 % 69.8 % 73.2 % 71.5 % 74.0 % 66.9 % ¦ 79.6 % Open Exeter 2012/2013
9 Persons, 60-69, screened for bowel cancer in last 30 months (2.5 year coverage, %) 783 57.6 % 55.0 % 60.2 % 52.2 % 58.8 % 43.3 % ¦ 64.0 % Open Exeter 2012/2013
10 Persons, 60-69, screened for bowel cancer within 6 months of invitation (Uptake, %) 372 58.3 % 54.4 % 62.1 % 52.5 % 58.7 % 43.6 % ¦ 65.1 % Open Exeter 2012/2013
11 Two-week wait referrals (Number per 100,000 population) 317 2919 2607 3259 2776 2166 1227 ¦ 5237 CWT 2012/2013
12 Two-week wait referrals (Indirectly age standardised referral ratio) 317 115.5 % 103.2 % 129.0 % n/a 100.0 % 55.8 % ¦ 316.6 % CWT 2012/2013
13 Two-week referrals with cancer (Conversion rate: % of all TWW referrals with cancer) 44 13.9 % 10.5 % 18.1 % 8.1 % 10.0 % 4.9 % ¦ 23.1 % CWT 2012/2013
14 Number of new cancer cases treated (% of which are TWW referrals) 86 51.2 % 40.8 % 61.4 % 46.7 % 47.7 % 33.3 % ¦ 70.8 % CWT 2012/2013
15 Two-week wait referrals with suspected breast cancer (Number per 100,000 population) 78 718 568 896 509 391 223 ¦ 1088 CWT 2012/2013
16 Two-week wait referrals with suspected lower GI cancer (Number per 100,000 population) 57 524 398 680 560 379 268 ¦ 1133 CWT 2012/2013
17 Two-week wait referrals with suspected lung cancer (Number per 100,000 population) 11 101 50 181 117 90 99 ¦ 296 CWT 2012/2013
18 Two-week wait referrals with suspected skin cancer (Number per 100,000 population) 68 626 486 794 515 375 271 ¦ 1333 CWT 2012/2013
19 In-patient or day-case colonoscopy procedures (Number per 100,000 population) 95 875 708 1069 700 674 357 ¦ 890 HES 2012/13
20 In-patient or day-case sigmoidoscopy procedures (Number per 100,000 population) 157 1446 1228 1690 1034 455 684 ¦ 1446 HES 2012/13
21 In-patient or day-case upper GI endoscopy procedures (Number per 100,000 population) 208 1915 1664 2194 1696 1132 799 ¦ 2062 HES 2012/13
22 Number of emergency admissions with cancer (Number per 100,000 population) 52 478 358 628 456 481 323 ¦ 738 HES Mar 2012 - Feb 2013
23 Number of emergency presentations (Number per 100,000 population) < 6 < 6 n/a n/a 0 214 0 n/a 0 Routes-Rapid 2012
24 Number of managed referral presentations (Number per 100,000 population) 43 395 356 434 335 305 208 ¦ 444 Routes-Rapid 2011-2012
Version 1.0, Dec 2013
We welcome comments and suggestions as to how to make future versions and iterations more relevant and useful for those who will use them. You can email us with your feedback at [email protected]
Where the "Practice indicator value" column shows "<6" then the indicator has been suppressed to minimise the risk that individual patients might be identified from the data.
APPLETON VILLAGE SURGERY CANCER PROFILE
Area Forum 2
Area Forum 2 key issues: The Area Forum has higher than
average levels of 16-18’s Not in Education, Employment or Training (NEET) and higher than average levels of children claiming free school meals.
Crime also remains an issue, with high levels of anti-social behaviour, burglary, criminal damage to dwellings and deliberate fires.
Overall, Area Forum 2 has a poorly performing economy, with higher rates of unemployment, people on out-of-work benefits and youth unemployment than the Halton average. The area also has low average house prices.
Generally the Area Forum performs worse than the Halton average for the majority of the health indicators, particularly in terms of alcohol hospital admissions and life expectancy.
Successful smoking quitter rates are significantly better for all wards in the Area Forum compared to the borough average.
Key Contacts: Lead Officer: [email protected] Community Development Officer:
[email protected] Area Forum Coordinator: [email protected] Cllr [email protected] (Chairman) Appleton; Cllr [email protected] Appleton; Cllr [email protected] Kingsway; Cllr [email protected] Kingsway; Cllr [email protected] Kingsway; Cllr [email protected] Appleton; Cllr [email protected] Riverside; Cllr [email protected] Riverside
Area Forum 2 is situated in the centre of Widnes and is made up of the following wards:
o Appleton o Kingsway o Riverside
It has a population of 18,820 who live in 8,030 households. There are 3,850 aged under 16; 12,200 of working age and 2,780 older people. It contains 5 areas that fall in the top 10% most deprived nationally. From the 2011 resident’s survey, the top 3 reasons for making this area a good place to live are:
o The level of crime o Clean Streets o Health Services
Resident’s also identified the following areas for improvement:
o Activities for teenagers o Road and pavement repairs o Job prospects
Overall, 79% of residents within this local area were satisfied with the area as a place to live. These profiles have been produced by Halton’s Customer Intelligence Unit and Public Health Intelligence Team. Please email [email protected] for further information, or [email protected] for more information on the health indicators.
Population 6,760 0-15 1,280 16-64 4,320 65+ 1,160 Households 3,060
Domain IndicatorWard Value
Halton Value
Halton Worst Halton Range
Halton Best
1 16-18's Not in Education, Employment or Training (NEET) - as a % of 16-18 population 8% 7% 11% 1%2 Free School Meals eligible pupils 34% 32% 59% 5%3 % achieving 5 GCSE's A* to C inc. English and Maths 68% 62% 39% 91%4 % Children classed as Overweight or Obese, Reception aged children 25% 27% 33% 18%5 % Children classed as Overweight or Obese, Year 6 aged children 38% 37% 60% 26%6 Low birth weight babies 7% 8% 11% 4%7 Teenage Conception Rate 54 55 96 218 JSA Claimant rate (Feb 14) 5% 4% 9% 1%9 Worklessness - % claiming out-of-work benefits (Aug 13) 19% 16% 31% 4%10 Youth Unemployment - % of 18-24 JSA Claimants (Feb 14) 9% 9% 15% 2%11 Avg House Price £87,197 £141,108 £65,979 £224,98612 Council Tax Band A properties 65% 47% 99% 0%13 Long term vacant properties 1% 1% 2% 0%14 IMD Score 41 33 64 715 Registered Social Landlord (RSL) Properties 19% 24% 78% 0%16 % in need of care (claiming care-related benefits) 13% 11% 18% 4%17 Emergency admissions for acute conditions that should not usually require hospital admission 162 156 240 8318 Hospital admissions due to accidents 513 386 575 18819 Emergency admissions due to lower respiratory tract infections, 0-15 years 418 496 775 6420 Cancer incidence 426 414 593 31421 Admission episodes for alcohol-attributable conditions 3,043 2,667 3,744 1,56822 Alcohol-specific hospital admissions - Males 1,202 803 1,379 21923 Alcohol-specific hospital admissions - Females 608 426 717 12424 Life expectancy – males 75 77 71 8325 Life expectancy – females 78 81 76 9326 Deaths under 75 due to circulatory disease 118 78 185 3327 Deaths under 75 due to cancer 151 138 222 7628 Successful smoking quitters at 4 week follow up 1,501 940 274 3,21329 Domestic Burglary rate 11 9 15 430 Anti-Social behaviour (ASB) rate 89 58 136 2131 Criminal Damage & Deliberate Fires rate 35 36 80 6
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*caution should be applied when using ward data due to the small numbers often involved Indicator Notes: 1 % 16-18 population who are NEET, HBC, Jan-14 2 % all pupils eligible for FSM, HBC School Census Jan-14 (Eng – www.gov.uk (National tables: SFR10/2012) - Jan 2013) 3 academic year, 2012/13 4-5 NCMP, 3-year average 2009/10, 2010/11, 2012/13 (Eng – HSCIC – 2012) 6 % of babies weighing less than 2500g at birth, Public health birth file 2008-12 (Eng – HSCIC – 2011) 7 rate of under 18 teenage conceptions per 1,000 females aged 15-17, ONS 2009-11 (Eng – ONS – 2012) 8-9 % 16-64 pop, NOMIS 10 % 18-24 pop, NOMIS 11 Land Registry Price Paid Data, 2013 12 % all properties in band A, 2014 13 % vacant for >6 months, 2014 14 IMD 2010 (the higher the IMD score, the more deprived an area is) 15 % all properties, HBC 2011 (Eng – www.gov.uk (table 119) – 2012) 16 % total pop claiming Disability Living Allowance or Attendance Allowance, DWP Aug-13 17 Standardised admission ratio, SUS data via EIS 2012/13 (Eng – HSCIC – 2012/13) 18 Directly Standardised Rate per 100,000 population, SUS data via EIS 2010/11 to 2012/13 (Eng – HSCIC – 2008/09) 19 rate per 100,000 population aged 0-15 years, SUS data via EIS 2010/11 to 2012/13 (Eng – HSCIC – 2011/12) 20 Directly Standardised Rate per 100,000 population diagnosed with cancer, all ages, North West Cancer Intelligence Service 2006-10 (Eng – HSCIC – 2008-10) 21 Directly Standardised Rate for hospital admissions due to alcohol-attributable conditions, for every 100,000 population (Individuals may be admitted more than once), SUS data via the alcohol universe 2012/13 (Eng – LAPE – 2010/11) 22-23 Directly Standardised Rate per 100,000 population for males/females, SUS data via the alcohol universe 2010/11 to 2012/13 (Eng – LAPE – 2010/11) 24-25 Life Expectancy at birth (in years), Public Health Mortality File 2009-13 (Eng – ONS – 2010-12) 26-27 Directly Standardised Rate per 100,000 population, Public Health Mortality File 2009-13 (Eng – HSCIC – 2010-12) 28 successfully quitting after 4 weeks, rate per 100,000 population aged 16+, Quit With Us (stop-smoking database) 2010/11 to 2012/13 (Eng – HSCIC – 2012/13) 29 rate per 1,000 households, 2013 30 rate per 1,000 population, ASB data includes finalisation codes for Domestic Disturbances, Nuisance, Environmental and Neighbour (Personal) behaviour (B and SE codes), 2013 31 Criminal damage to dwelling + deliberate fires, rate per 1,000 households, 2013 (Eng – Neighbourhood Statistics (NeSS) – 2012/13)
Appleton key points: Appleton performs worse than the Halton average in most of the economic and housing indicators. Alcohol-specific hospital admissions for males and hospital admissions due to accidents are significantly worse
than the borough average. The percentage of overweight or obese children in Reception is lower than the Halton average.
KEY:
Population 6,560 0-15 1,360 16-64 4,230 65+ 970 Households 2,670
Domain IndicatorWard Value
Halton Value
Halton Worst Halton Range
Halton Best
1 16-18's Not in Education, Employment or Training (NEET) - as a % of 16-18 population 10% 7% 11% 1%2 Free School Meals eligible pupils 46% 32% 59% 5%3 % achieving 5 GCSE's A* to C inc. English and Maths 61% 62% 39% 91%4 % Children classed as Overweight or Obese, Reception aged children 25% 27% 33% 18%5 % Children classed as Overweight or Obese, Year 6 aged children 42% 37% 60% 26%6 Low birth weight babies 10% 8% 11% 4%7 Teenage Conception Rate 69 55 96 218 JSA Claimant rate (Feb 14) 5% 4% 9% 1%9 Worklessness - % claiming out-of-work benefits (Aug 13) 17% 16% 31% 4%10 Youth Unemployment - % of 18-24 JSA Claimants (Feb 14) 11% 9% 15% 2%11 Avg House Price £111,438 £141,108 £65,979 £224,98612 Council Tax Band A properties 59% 47% 99% 0%13 Long term vacant properties 1% 1% 2% 0%14 IMD Score 41 33 64 715 Registered Social Landlord (RSL) Properties 30% 24% 78% 0%16 % in need of care (claiming care-related benefits) 12% 11% 18% 4%17 Emergency admissions for acute conditions that should not usually require hospital admission 166 156 240 8318 Hospital admissions due to accidents 419 386 575 18819 Emergency admissions due to lower respiratory tract infections, 0-15 years 759 496 775 6420 Cancer incidence 400 414 593 31421 Admission episodes for alcohol-attributable conditions 3,024 2,667 3,744 1,56822 Alcohol-specific hospital admissions - Males 1,051 803 1,379 21923 Alcohol-specific hospital admissions - Females 607 426 717 12424 Life expectancy – males 75 77 71 8325 Life expectancy – females 80 81 76 9326 Deaths under 75 due to circulatory disease 69 78 185 3327 Deaths under 75 due to cancer 158 138 222 7628 Successful smoking quitters at 4 week follow up 1,142 940 274 3,21329 Domestic Burglary rate 9 9 15 430 Anti-Social behaviour (ASB) rate 101 58 136 2131 Criminal Damage & Deliberate Fires rate 71 36 80 6
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*caution should be applied when using ward data due to the small numbers often involved Indicator Notes: 1 % 16-18 population who are NEET, HBC, Jan-14 2 % all pupils eligible for FSM, HBC School Census Jan-14 (Eng – www.gov.uk (National tables: SFR10/2012) - Jan 2013) 3 academic year, 2012/13 4-5 NCMP, 3-year average 2009/10, 2010/11, 2012/13 (Eng – HSCIC – 2012) 6 % of babies weighing less than 2500g at birth, Public health birth file 2008-12 (Eng – HSCIC – 2011) 7 rate of under 18 teenage conceptions per 1,000 females aged 15-17, ONS 2009-11 (Eng – ONS – 2012) 8-9 % 16-64 pop, NOMIS 10 % 18-24 pop, NOMIS 11 Land Registry Price Paid Data, 2013 12 % all properties in band A, 2014 13 % vacant for >6 months, 2014 14 IMD 2010 (the higher the IMD score, the more deprived an area is) 15 % all properties, HBC 2011 (Eng – www.gov.uk (table 119) – 2012) 16 % total pop claiming Disability Living Allowance or Attendance Allowance, DWP Aug-13 17 Standardised admission ratio, SUS data via EIS 2012/13 (Eng – HSCIC – 2012/13) 18 Directly Standardised Rate per 100,000 population, SUS data via EIS 2010/11 to 2012/13 (Eng – HSCIC – 2008/09) 19 rate per 100,000 population aged 0-15 years, SUS data via EIS 2010/11 to 2012/13 (Eng – HSCIC – 2011/12) 20 Directly Standardised Rate per 100,000 population diagnosed with cancer, all ages, North West Cancer Intelligence Service 2006-10 (Eng – HSCIC – 2008-10) 21 Directly Standardised Rate for hospital admissions due to alcohol-attributable conditions, for every 100,000 population (Individuals may be admitted more than once), SUS data via the alcohol universe 2012/13 (Eng – LAPE – 2010/11) 22-23 Directly Standardised Rate per 100,000 population for males/females, SUS data via the alcohol universe 2010/11 to 2012/13 (Eng – LAPE – 2010/11) 24-25 Life Expectancy at birth (in years), Public Health Mortality File 2009-13 (Eng – ONS – 2010-12) 26-27 Directly Standardised Rate per 100,000 population, Public Health Mortality File 2009-13 (Eng – HSCIC – 2010-12) 28 successfully quitting after 4 weeks, rate per 100,000 population aged 16+, Quit With Us (stop-smoking database) 2010/11 to 2012/13 (Eng – HSCIC – 2012/13) 29 rate per 1,000 households, 2013 30 rate per 1,000 population, ASB data includes finalisation codes for Domestic Disturbances, Nuisance, Environmental and Neighbour (Personal) behaviour (B and SE codes), 2013 31 Criminal damage to dwelling + deliberate fires, rate per 1,000 households, 2013 (Eng – Neighbourhood Statistics (NeSS) – 2012/13)
Kingsway key points: Kingsway performs worse than the Halton average in almost all of the economic, academic and crime
indicators. Alcohol-specific hospital admissions for females and males are both higher than the borough average. Hospital admissions for lower respiratory tract infections in 0-15 year olds are the 2nd worst in Halton. The successful smoking quitter rate (at 4 weeks) is significantly better than the Halton average.
KEY:
Population 5,500 0-15 1,210 16-64 3,650 65+ 640 Households 2,300
Domain IndicatorWard Value
Halton Value
Halton Worst Halton Range
Halton Best
1 16-18's Not in Education, Employment or Training (NEET) - as a % of 16-18 population 10% 7% 11% 1%2 Free School Meals eligible pupils 39% 32% 59% 5%3 % achieving 5 GCSE's A* to C inc. English and Maths 39% 62% 39% 91%4 % Children classed as Overweight or Obese, Reception aged children 28% 27% 33% 18%5 % Children classed as Overweight or Obese, Year 6 aged children 37% 37% 60% 26%6 Low birth weight babies 8% 8% 11% 4%7 Teenage Conception Rate 86 55 96 218 JSA Claimant rate (Feb 14) 5% 4% 9% 1%9 Worklessness - % claiming out-of-work benefits (Aug 13) 21% 16% 31% 4%10 Youth Unemployment - % of 18-24 JSA Claimants (Feb 14) 10% 9% 15% 2%11 Avg House Price £96,887 £141,108 £65,979 £224,98612 Council Tax Band A properties 66% 47% 99% 0%13 Long term vacant properties 1% 1% 2% 0%14 IMD Score 49 33 64 715 Registered Social Landlord (RSL) Properties 32% 24% 78% 0%16 % in need of care (claiming care-related benefits) 12% 11% 18% 4%17 Emergency admissions for acute conditions that should not usually require hospital admission 240 156 240 8318 Hospital admissions due to accidents 539 386 575 18819 Emergency admissions due to lower respiratory tract infections, 0-15 years 744 496 775 6420 Cancer incidence 427 414 593 31421 Admission episodes for alcohol-attributable conditions 3,689 2,667 3,744 1,56822 Alcohol-specific hospital admissions - Males 1,379 803 1,379 21923 Alcohol-specific hospital admissions - Females 465 426 717 12424 Life expectancy – males 73 77 71 8325 Life expectancy – females 82 81 76 9326 Deaths under 75 due to circulatory disease 108 78 185 3327 Deaths under 75 due to cancer 168 138 222 7628 Successful smoking quitters at 4 week follow up 1,405 940 274 3,21329 Domestic Burglary rate 15 9 15 430 Anti-Social behaviour (ASB) rate 136 58 136 2131 Criminal Damage & Deliberate Fires rate 79 36 80 6
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*caution should be applied when using ward data due to the small numbers often involved Indicator Notes: 1 % 16-18 population who are NEET, HBC, Jan-14 2 % all pupils eligible for FSM, HBC School Census Jan-14 (Eng – www.gov.uk (National tables: SFR10/2012) - Jan 2013) 3 academic year, 2012/13 4-5 NCMP, 3-year average 2009/10, 2010/11, 2012/13 (Eng – HSCIC – 2012) 6 % of babies weighing less than 2500g at birth, Public health birth file 2008-12 (Eng – HSCIC – 2011) 7 rate of under 18 teenage conceptions per 1,000 females aged 15-17, ONS 2009-11 (Eng – ONS – 2012) 8-9 % 16-64 pop, NOMIS 10 % 18-24 pop, NOMIS 11 Land Registry Price Paid Data, 2013 12 % all properties in band A, 2014 13 % vacant for >6 months, 2014 14 IMD 2010 (the higher the IMD score, the more deprived an area is) 15 % all properties, HBC 2011 (Eng – www.gov.uk (table 119) – 2012) 16 % total pop claiming Disability Living Allowance or Attendance Allowance, DWP Aug-13 17 Standardised admission ratio, SUS data via EIS 2012/13 (Eng – HSCIC – 2012/13) 18 Directly Standardised Rate per 100,000 population, SUS data via EIS 2010/11 to 2012/13 (Eng – HSCIC – 2008/09) 19 rate per 100,000 population aged 0-15 years, SUS data via EIS 2010/11 to 2012/13 (Eng – HSCIC – 2011/12) 20 Directly Standardised Rate per 100,000 population diagnosed with cancer, all ages, North West Cancer Intelligence Service 2006-10 (Eng – HSCIC – 2008-10) 21 Directly Standardised Rate for hospital admissions due to alcohol-attributable conditions, for every 100,000 population (Individuals may be admitted more than once), SUS data via the alcohol universe 2012/13 (Eng – LAPE – 2010/11) 22-23 Directly Standardised Rate per 100,000 population for males/females, SUS data via the alcohol universe 2010/11 to 2012/13 (Eng – LAPE – 2010/11) 24-25 Life Expectancy at birth (in years), Public Health Mortality File 2009-13 (Eng – ONS – 2010-12) 26-27 Directly Standardised Rate per 100,000 population, Public Health Mortality File 2009-13 (Eng – HSCIC – 2010-12) 28 successfully quitting after 4 weeks, rate per 100,000 population aged 16+, Quit With Us (stop-smoking database) 2010/11 to 2012/13 (Eng – HSCIC – 2012/13) 29 rate per 1,000 households, 2013 30 rate per 1,000 population, ASB data includes finalisation codes for Domestic Disturbances, Nuisance, Environmental and Neighbour (Personal) behaviour (B and SE codes), 2013 31 Criminal damage to dwelling + deliberate fires, rate per 1,000 households, 2013 (Eng – Neighbourhood Statistics (NeSS) – 2012/13)
Riverside key points: Riverside performs worse than the Halton figures in all of the economic, academic and housing indicators. All crime rates in Riverside are the highest rates out of the 21 wards in Halton. Rates of admissions due to accidents, alcohol-specific admissions for males and lower respiratory tract
infection admissions (0-15 years) in Riverside are amongst the highest in Halton. Male life expectancy in Riverside is the 2nd lowest in Halton. The successful smoking quitter rate (at 4 weeks) is significantly better than the Halton average.
KEY:
Community Physical Assets Building Name Building Type Ward Connexions Widnes http://www.help4me.info/Service.aspx?serviceid=%7B525c8360-b80e-4974-8836-3bd159db6d0f%7D
Adult Education Appleton
Kingsway Learning Centre http://www3.halton.gov.uk/educationandlearning/learningcentres/
Adult Education Kingsway
Riverside College Kingsway http://www.riversidecollege.ac.uk/website/
Adult Education Kingsway
YMCA training http://www.haltonymca.org.uk/training.html
Adult Education Riverside
Ferndale Court Care Home http://www.carehome.co.uk/carehome.cfm/searchazref/20003525FERB
Care Homes Riverside
Ferndale Mews http://www.hc-one.co.uk/homes/ferndale-mews/
Care Homes Riverside
Halton View Care Home http://www.carehome.co.uk/carehome.cfm/searchazref/10003525HANA
Care Homes Appleton
Millbrow Care Home http://www.carehome.co.uk/carehome.cfm/searchazref/20003525MILA
Care Homes Appleton
Oak Meadow Community Support Centre http://www.carehome.co.uk/carehome.cfm/searchazref/10003525OAKB
Care Homes Appleton
Appleton Village Surgery* http://www.appletonvillagesurgery.co.uk/
CCG Assets Appleton
Widnes Healthcare Resource Centre http://www.nhs.uk/Services/gp/Overview/DefaultView.aspx?id=42857
CCG Assets Kingsway
Lugsdale Road Clinic CCG Assets Riverside Midwood House CCG Assets Appleton Millbrow Clinic http://www.nhs.uk/Services/clinics/MapsAndDirections/DefaultView.aspx?id=33224
CCG Assets Appleton
West Bank Surgery* http://www.westbankmedicalcentre.nhs.uk/contact1.aspx
CCG Assets Riverside
Kids Planet Nursery http://www.kidsplanetdaynurseries.co.uk/nursery/widnes/about-us.asp
Children’s Centres Kingsway
Ditton Evangelical Church Churches/Village Halls Ditton Holy Gospel Hall Churches/Village Halls Appleton St Bede’s Catholic Church Churches/Village Halls Appleton St Marie's Church http://stmarieschurch.com/
Churches/Village Halls Riverside
St Marys Church (West Bank)* http://stmaryswestbank.widnesdeanery.org/
Churches/Village Halls Riverside
St Paul’s Church http://www.stpaulswidnes.co.uk/
Churches/Village Halls Kingsway
St Raphael’s RC Church Churches/Village Halls Kingsway St Johns Church* http://www.stjohnswidnes.homecall.co.uk/
Churches/Village Halls Appleton
St Michael’s Catholic Church Churches/Village Halls Riverside The Foundry http://www.thefoundry.org.uk/
Churches/Village Halls Appleton
The Widnes National Spiritualist Church http://www.widnesspiritualistchurch.co.uk/
Churches/Village Halls Riverside
Trinity Methodist Church http://www.widnesmethodistchurches.org.uk/trinity.shtml
Churches/Village Halls Appleton
Widnes Baptist Church* http://www.widnesbaptistchurch.co.uk/
Churches/Village Halls Appleton
Deacon Dental Ltd. http://www.nhs.uk/Services/dentists/Overview/DefaultView.aspx?id=23914
Dentist Appleton
Dental Elements http://dental-elements.co.uk/
Dentist Appleton
Talking Teeth http://www.nhs.uk/Services/dentists/Overview/DefaultView.aspx?id=23916
Dentist Appleton
Dr Martin & Partners http://www.nhs.uk/Services/gp/Overview/DefaultView.aspx?id=43830
GPs Appleton
Dr Narayana PL and Partner http://www.nhs.uk/Services/gp/Overview/DefaultView.aspx?id=40076
GPs Riverside
Drs Schofield & Brindle http://www.nhs.uk/Services/gp/Overview/DefaultView.aspx?id=38237
GPs Appleton
Newtown Surgery http://www.nhs.uk/Services/gp/Overview/DefaultView.aspx?id=38788
GPs Kingsway
Oaks Place Surgery* http://www.nhs.uk/Services/gp/Overview/DefaultView.aspx?id=40750
GPs Kingsway
Peelhouse Medical Plaza* http://www.peelhouse-medical-plaza.nhs.uk/
GPs Appleton
Widnes GP Health Centre http://www.nhs.uk/Services/gp/Overview/DefaultView.aspx?id=42857
GPs Kingsway
DW Sports Fitness – Widnes http://www.dwfitnessclubs.com/club/widnes
Leisure Appleton
Kingsway Leisure Centre http://www.dcleisurecentres.co.uk/centres/kingsway-leisure-centre/
Leisure Kingsway
Widnes Masonic Hall* http://www.widnesfreemasons.org.uk/
Leisure Kingsway
Muscle & Figure Leisure Riverside Stadium Fitness* http://www.stobartstadiumhalton.org.uk/stadium-fitness/
Leisure Kingsway
Widnes Library* http://www3.halton.gov.uk/educationandlearning/libraries/
Libraries Riverside
Conlon & Sons (Opticians) Ltd http://www.conlons.co.uk/widnes-opticians
Opticians Appleton
Crown Optical Centre http://www.widnesmarket.com/portfolio-type/crown-optical-centre/
Opticians Appleton
Merton Beck Opticians http://mertonbeck.co.uk/
Opticians Appleton
Scrivens Ltd http://scrivensopticians.com/
Opticians Appleton
Specsavers Opticians http://www.specsavers.co.uk/stores/widnes
Opticians Appleton
Vision Express http://www.visionexpress.com/opticians/opticians-in-northern-england/cheshire/widnes/
Opticians Appleton
Asda Stores Ltd http://storelocator.asda.com/store/widnes
Pharmacies Kingsway
Boots Uk Limited http://www.boots.com/en/Store-Locator/Boots-Widnes-Shopping-Park/
Pharmacies Appleton
Cooke's Chemist http://cookeschemist.com/index.php
Pharmacies Appleton
Instore Pharmacy http://www.nhs.uk/Services/pharmacies/Overview/DefaultView.aspx?id=34574
Pharmacies Riverside
Mcdougall's Pharmacy http://www.nhs.uk/Services/pharmacies/Overview/DefaultView.aspx?id=6855
Pharmacies Kingsway
The Co-Operative Pharmacy http://www.co-operative.coop/find-us/pharmacy/?q=widnes&lat=53.361024&long=-2.7336370000000443&filters=Pharmacy&options=
Pharmacies Appleton
West Bank Pharmacy http://www.nhs.uk/Services/pharmacies/Overview/DefaultView.aspx?id=7536
Pharmacies Riverside
Widnes Late Night Pharmacy http://www.nhs.uk/Services/pharmacies/Overview/DefaultView.aspx?id=4664
Pharmacies Appleton
Birchfield Nursery http://www.help4me.info/Service.aspx?serviceid=%7B224c9b79-f91f-4ddc-b393-b7dc764df258%7D
Schools Kingsway
Ditton Primary School http://www.thelifecloud.net/schools/DittonPrimarySchool/
Schools Kingsway
Fairfield Infant School http://clc2.uniservity.com/Grouphomepage.asp?GroupId=314778
Schools Appleton
Fairfield Junior School http://www.thelifecloud.net/schools/FairfieldJuniorSchool/
Schools Appleton
Saint Peter and Paul Catholic High School http://www.saintspeterandpaul.halton.sch.uk/
Schools Kingsway
Simms Cross Primary School http://www.thelifecloud.net/schools/SimmsCrossPrimarySchool/
Schools Kingsway
St Bedes Catholic Infant School http://www.thelifecloud.net/schools/StBedesCatholicInfantSchool/
Schools Appleton
St Bedes Catholic Junior School http://stbedejuniorscouk.ipage.com/sbjsite1/
Schools Appleton
St Gerard’s Catholic Primary and Nursery School http://www.thelifecloud.net/schools/StGerardsRCPrimarySchool/
Schools Appleton
Wade Deacon High School http://www.wadedeacon.com/page/default.asp?title=Home&pid=1
Schools Kingsway
West Bank Primary School http://www.westbankprimary.ik.org/
Schools Riverside
CRMZ* http://www3.halton.gov.uk/educationandlearning/youthsupport/149934/
Youth Centre Kingsway
Kingsway Learning Centre http://www3.halton.gov.uk/educationandlearning/learningcentres/
Youth Centres Kingsway
*Wellbeing Enterprises For more information around the Voluntary and Community sector please visit Halton and St Helens Voluntary and Community Action at https://www.haltonsthelensvca.org.uk/
Changes in Health Indicators for Appleton Ward
This is a summary of the changes in health indicators for 2014 compared with 2013 for Appleton
ward. For the full report, including socio-economic, academic and crime indicators, please see the
next section in this pack – ‘Area Forum 2’ by The Customer Intelligence Team at Halton Borough
Council. The Area Forum report also includes data from your neighbouring wards – Kingsway and
Riverside. Figure 1 (below) shows changes in health indicators over the previous two years, with a
percentage change in the last column.
Figure 1 Key health indicators for 2013 and 2014; percentage change in indicators
Indicator 2013 2014 % Diff Reception aged children with excess weight > (%) 25.8 20.9 -19.0% Year 6 aged children with excess weight > (%) 33.9 38.6 13.9% Teenage Conception Rate (Crude rate per 1,000 15-17 year old females) 54.0 53.5 -0.9%
Life expectancy – males 74.3 75.1 1.1% Life expectancy - females 79.1 78.4 -0.9% Deaths under 75 due to circulatory disease (DSR per 100,000 population under 75) 118.8 118.0 -0.7%
Deaths under 75 due to cancer (Directly Standardised Rate per 100,000 population under 75)
149.5 151.1 1.1%
Admission episodes for alcohol-attributable conditions (DSR per 100,000 population under 75) 3030.6 3043.2 0.4%
Alcohol-specific hospital admissions – Males (Directly Standardised Rate per 100,000 population) 1361.0 1201.7 -11.7%
Alcohol-specific hospital admissions – Females (Directly Standardised Rate per 100,000 population) 634.1 607.5 -4.2%
Emergency admissions for acute conditions that should not usually require hospital admission (Directly Standardised Rate per 100,000 population)
198.4 161.6 -18.5%
Hospital admissions due to accidents (Directly Standardised Rate per 100,000 population) 426.6 513.1 20.3%
Emergency admissions due to lower respiratory tract infections, 0-15 years (Crude rate of admissions per 100,000 population of 0-15 year olds)
551.9 418.0 -24.3%
Successful smoking quitters at 4 week follow up (Crude rate per 100,000 population 16+) 1213.6 1500.5 23.6%
Source: ‘Area Forum 2’ by The Customer Intelligence Team at Halton Borough Council