Tamworth District Profile (2016)
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EARLY YEARS DISTRICT PROFILE TAMWORTH DISTRICT PROFILE DECEMBER 2016 SCC USE EARLY YEARS DISTRICT PROFILE CONTENTS PAGE Introduction ................................................................................................................................... 3 Summary ......................................................................................................................................... 4 Population Ward Boundaries ............................................................................................................................. 6 Under 5 Population .......................................................................................................................... 7 Household Composition ................................................................................................................ 8 Worklessness .................................................................................................................................... 9 Children’s Social Care Groups .................................................................................................... 10 Building Resilient Families and Communities (BRFC) ........................................................... 11 Early Years Reach ........................................................................................................................... 13 Children Centre Attendance Map .............................................................................................. 14 Conception Under 18 Conception (District map) ........................................................................................ 16 Birth General Fertility Rates ................................................................................................................. 17 Low Birthweight ............................................................................................................................. 18 0-6 Weeks Breastfeeding Prevalence .............................................................................................................. 19 1 Year and 2 Year Think2 ............................................................................................................................................... 20 Sufficiency ......................................................................................................................................... 21 Toddler Sufficiency ......................................................................................................................................... 22 First Day at School Childhood Obesity ......................................................................................................................... 23 Early Years Foundation Stage Profile ......................................................................................... 25 Contact for Further Information Report compiled by Operational Intelligence & Performance Team Claire Makinson - Performance Manager, 01785 277067 Farhana Patel - Performance Officer, 01785 277798 SCC USE 2 EARLY YEARS DISTRICT PROFILE INTRODUCTION The purpose of the Early Years District Profile is to bring together a wide range of indicators for each district. It provides the commissioners with a robust evidence base across a range of health and wellbeing issues to help identify priority areas to target and place services in appropriate areas. The report pulls together information from various sources to present a picture of the health and wellbeing of children aged 0-4, following through the Best Start Pathway. The data is presented and displayed at Ward Level with comparisons made with Staffordshire and England. Information used in the report is the latest available at the time of writing. Health and social needs are complex and it is unlikely that there will be a single factor which is responsible for the particular situation in each local area. Therefore, it is important that no single item of information is treated in isolation. Instead the various pieces of data and evidence should be used together to give a better picture of the needs of children and young people in the local community. We aim to produce this annually with the next one being due November 2016 to support the Districts with their Local Authority annual conversations. SCC USE 3 EARLY YEARS DISTRICT PROFILE SUMMARY Tamworth district comprises of 10 wards, with 12 Lower Super Output Areas of 0-30% deprivation spread across 7 wards. The population of children aged 0-4 has seen a drop in the majority of wards between 2013 and 2015 with 8 wards showing a decrease and 2 wards showing an increase. Overall the population of children aged 0-4 within Tamworth has decreased by 0.4 percentage points from 4,978 to 4,721 between 2013 and 2015; this is in line with the slight reduction shown across Staffordshire. For families with dependents, married couples are the largest group in the district accounting for 16.1% of households; the proportion of households that are lone parents varies across the wards from 4.3% in Trinity and 11.3% in Glascote giving an average of 8% of all households that have children under the age of 5 in Tamworth. The numbers of children living in out of work benefit claimant households has seen a significant increase across the whole of Tamworth from 2012 to 2013. However from 2013 the number of children aged 0-4 in benefit claimant households has reduced by 15 percentage points. Amington and Bolehall have seen the largest decrease by over 30%; Spital and Stoneydelph have both shown a slight increase. In terms of Children’s Social Care groups, the largest proportion of Children in Need are in Stoneydelph and Belgrave wards. Glascote and Stoneydelph have the largest proportion of children who are subject of a Child Protection Plan; there are a total of 13 children across Tamworth who are Looked After, but due to the low numbers the data has been suppressed. The Early Years Reach across Tamworth has shown an improvement of 21.5 percentage points between 2014/15 and 2015/16 equating to 1,043 additional children aged 0-4. All wards have shown an improvement in the Reach, most noticeably in Mercian with an increase of 40.3 percentage points. All of the 7 wards with areas of 0-30% deprivation saw an increase in the Reach, again Mercian has shown the largest increase by 27.9 percentage points; this gives Tamworth a 0-30% Reach figure of 69.5%, a 24 percentage point increase from 2014/15. Attendance at Children’s Centre activities in Tamworth shows that the majority of attendees are from the local areas surrounding the centres and the community venue. Attendees are also seen to be travelling from other districts as far as Newcastle-under-Lyme and Staffordshire Moorlands. There have also been many families travelling from outside of Staffordshire. SCC USE 4 EARLY YEARS DISTRICT PROFILE SUMMARY The general fertility rates across the whole of Tamworth are statistically similar than England at 61.9 per 1,000 women aged 15-44 compared to 63.2 per 1,000 for England and 57.8 per 1,000 for Staffordshire. The highest general fertility rate is in Belgrave with 70.0 per 1,000 and the lowest is in Mercian with 55.8; the rates have reduced slightly from previous years. 7.7% of babies born in Tamworth are born with a low birthweight, which is statistically similar to both the Staffordshire and England average of 7.2% and 7.3% respectively; this is a marginal decrease from 2011/2013. The proportion of babies who are born with a low birthweight ranges from 5% in Castle to 13.2% in Mercian. Data as at Summer 2016 shows the take up of Think2 childcare places is 74% in Tamworth. In terms of sufficiency for Think2 places, there is a vacancy rate of 31%; this is comparable with the vacancy rate for all 2 year olds at 27%. Staffordshire has a marginally higher than England rate of children who are in Reception class with excess weight; the rate for Tamworth is statistically similar to England with 23.3%. All the wards across Tamworth have a similar rate, with Mercian the highest with 25.6% and Wilnecote the lowest with 21.2%. Children of the same age group who are classed as obese is again similar to England across the whole of Tamworth. Tamworth has seen a slight increase in obesity overall by 1 percentage point. All 10 wards have seen an increase in obesity rates from the period of 2010-2013 to 2012-2015. The proportion of children in Tamworth with a Good Level of Development at the Early Years Foundation Stage is slightly higher than both the Staffordshire and England average of 73.8% and 69% respectively. The Good Level of Development rates vary across the wards from 56% in Amington to 82.4% in Mercian. Overall girls are performing significantly better than boys apart from in Boehall and Stoneydelph where more boys achieved a Good Level of Development. SCC USE 5 EARLY YEARS DISTRICT PROFILE POPULATION WARD BOUNDARIES Ward Boundaries 1 Amington 2 Belgrave 3 Bolehall 4 Castle 5 Glascote 6 Mercian 7 Spital 7 8 Stonydelph 9 Trinity 6 10 Wilnecote 3 1 4 5 2 8 10 9 Wards by Deprivation 0% - 30% 30% - 50% 50% - 70% 70% - 100% Tamworth District This product contains mapping data licensed from Ordinance Survey with the permission of the Controller of Her Majesty’s Stationary Office© Crown Copyright and/or database right 2015. All rights reserved. Licence Number 100019422 SCC USE 6 EARLY YEARS DISTRICT PROFILE POPULATION UNDER 5 POPULATION Proportion of children aged 0-4 , 2013 - 2015 2013 2014 2015 Ward Total Total Percentage Total Total Percentage