Office for National Statistics
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Personal Well-being in the UK, 2013/14

Key points

  • The latest personal well-being estimates suggest year-on-year improvements in reported well-being since 2011/12, when ONS started to collect the data.
  • Over this three-year period, there have been small but significant improvements in average personal well-being ratings in each UK country and across all four measures of well-being.
  • The proportions of people reporting the highest levels of personal well-being have grown since 2011/12 for each of the four measures. The greatest gain has been in reduced anxiety levels. The proportion of people in the UK reporting very low anxiety grew between 2011/12 and 2013/14.
  • There were also reductions in the proportions of people in the UK rating their well-being at the lowest levels for all of the measures.
  • In 2013/14, people in Northern Ireland gave higher ratings for each aspect of their personal well-being on average than those in any other UK country. This has been the case in each year since ONS began collecting the data.
  • In 2013/14, people in London reported lower personal well-being on average for each of the measures than the equivalent UK averages, but since 2011/12 London has had improvements across all the average measures of well-being.
  • Since 2011/12, average ratings of personal well-being have improved significantly across all measures in the West Midlands. The region also had the lowest average anxiety rating of any English region in 2013/14.
Get all the tables for this publication in the data section of this publication
Channel website: https://www.ons.gov.uk/

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