Living & Working Well
The background
The purpose of the Living and Working Well Joint Strategic Needs Assessment (JSNA) section is to support the work of the Council’s Health and Wellbeing Board by summarising key local needs and services, and providing a series of evidence-based priorities to improve the health of the local working age population (aged 20-64). It acts as a useful reference to inform high quality and co-ordinated local commissioning and the provision of services shaped to the needs of their users, as well as to inform the wider council and members of the public.1
It sets out the key needs and issues of the local population, and makes a series of evidence-based recommendations to improve health and wellbeing, and to reduce inequalities. Central Bedfordshire’s overall score for deprivation (using the 2019 Index of Multiple Deprivation) relative to all other local authorities in England, puts it in the least deprived decile. Where possible, Central Bedfordshire is compared to local authorities of similar deprivation. These are: Bath and North East Somerset, Bracknell Forest, Buckinghamshire, Isles of Scilly, Kingston upon Thames, Oxfordshire, Richmond up Thames, Rutland, South Gloucestershire, Surrey, West Berkshire, Windsor and Maidenhead, Wokingham and York).
Finding the information you need
The dashboard features the health improvement indicators for health in adults, including those relating to smoking, drug and alcohol use, sexual health, and healthy weight; plus health protection factors, such as NHS Health Checks and wider determinants, including employment and deprivation. It will also detail the health outcomes relating to long-term health conditions including: CVD and stroke; respiratory illness; cancer, diabetes; as well as the impact of these on the over-arching health indicator of life expectancy.
Format: The dashboard is in the form of an interactive Power BI report, which will enable you to interrogate the data and charts according to your needs.
Coming next
Detailed analysis
Over time, this section will build to include further analysis of the factors that impact on the health of working age people and details of the policies, services and actions developed to address them. It will include:
- Wider determinants, which includes factors relating to: family, friends and communities, housing, transport, work and employment, money and resources, deprivation, the cost of living and climate change
- Lifestyle, which examines health-related behaviours including: smoking, drugs and alcohol, sexual health, healthy weight and physical activity
- Health and well-being. This covers oral health, workplace well-being, mental health and resilience and musculoskeletal condition
- Long-term conditions, which includes: cancer, cardiovascular disease, diabetes and respiratory disorders
- Sensory and physical disabilities, which examines the relationship between learning disabilities and other sensory and physical disabilities on key health indicators.
- Health protection This covers the role, provision and take-up of health protection activities such as Health Checks and screening programmes.
The impact of COVID-19
This includes both the direct impact of COVID-19 on key health-related indicators, and the indirect impact on wider determinants. Please also see the 2023 Community Engagement & COVID-19 report on the impact of the pandemic on health inequalities in Central Bedfordshire.
Priority actions
These are the activities that have been designed to address the issues identified as being detrimental to health and well-being and those which promote better health outcomes.
Areas of continued focus
These are high level objectives that have previously been identified as priorities and that remain important to delivering better health outcomes for the working age population of Central Bedfordshire.
References
- Department of Health. 2011. Joint strategic needs assessment and joint health and wellbeing strategies explained. Available at: https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/215261/dh_131733.pdf [Accessed 11 December 2020].