Deprivation (health and wellbeing needs in South Tyneside)

Overview

In England, deprivation is measured using The Indices of Deprivation 2019 (IMD 2019). It is based on seven different domains of deprivation:

  • Income Deprivation
  • Employment Deprivation
  • Education, Skills and Training Deprivation
  • Health Deprivation and Disability
  • Crime
  • Barriers to Housing and Services
  • Living Environment Deprivation Each of these domains is based on a basket

Combining information from the seven domains produces an overall relative measure of deprivation.

How deprivation data is used

  • National and local organisations use the Index of Multiple Deprivation, sometimes in conjunction with other data, to distribute funding or target resources to areas.
  • It is widely used across central government to focus programmes on the most deprived areas.
  • Locally, it is often used as evidence in the development of strategies, to target interventions, and in bids for funding.
  • The voluntary and community sector also uses the Index, for example, to identify areas where people may benefit from the services they provide.

Deprivation and health

  • Deprivation is a well-known correlation with health.
  • The more deprived areas in England suffer from worse health outcomes across the Public Health Outcomes Framework.
  • There is a gap of almost 20 years in the healthy life expectancies of those that live in the most and least deprived areas of England.

Deprivation in South Tyneside

  • The IMD ranks each small area in England from 1 (most deprived) to 32,844 (least deprived). Each small area has about 1,500 residents. Small area rankings are averaged to give local authority rankings.
  • Across the 7 domains, South Tyneside has the following rankings (higher rankings indicate more deprivation and are out of 326 authorities):
    • Income: 13th
    • Employment: 3rd
    • Education: 75th
    • Health: 15th
    • Crime: 69th
    • Barriers: 266rd
    • Living: 315th
  • South Tyneside has 102 small community areas ranking from 305th out of 32,844 small areas in England to 31,929th. The higher the ranking, the more deprived.
  • Go to a map of English IMD

Interpreting deprivation data

  • Deprivations data is often given in quintiles (groups of 5) or deciles (groups of 10) with:
    • 1 being the lowest and most deprived
    • 5 or 10 being the highest and least deprived.
  • IMD is a measurement of relative deprivation and not affluence. It can be used to compare two or more areas.
  • Because methods for calculating deprivation change with each release (the previous score came out in 2010), scores between releases for the same area cannot be compared.
  • A summary infographic on how IMD scores can and cannot be used can be viewed at Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government: The English Indices of Deprivation 2019 (IoD2019) .

Additional resources