Long Term Monitoring of Health Inequalities: Headline Indicators – October 2014
Annual update of the 'Long-term Monitoring of Health Inequalities' headline indicators.
Healthy birthweight
A baby is considered to be of healthy birthweight (a weight appropriate for its gestational age) when it lies between the 5th and 95th centile for weight at its gestational age. Centiles are derived from Scottish data on births between the years 1998 and 2003.
There are slightly more cases of healthy birthweight in the least deprived areas than in the most deprived (91.1% and 89.0% respectively, in 2012). However, since 1997, levels of both relative and absolute inequality have been low and stable.
Note that data for 2012 are provisional.
Inequalities gradient in 2012
Relative Index of Inequality (RII) over time
Absolute range over time
Scale / context
Number of healthy BW babies |
Target population size (live singleton births) |
Percentage |
|
---|---|---|---|
1997 |
51,280 |
56,878 |
90.2 |
1998 |
49,401 |
54,982 |
89.8 |
1999 |
47,240 |
52,607 |
89.8 |
2000 |
45,516 |
50,927 |
89.4 |
2001 |
44,526 |
49,632 |
89.7 |
2002 |
43,323 |
48,375 |
89.6 |
2003 |
43,856 |
48,945 |
89.6 |
2004 |
45,462 |
50,879 |
89.4 |
2005 |
45,194 |
50,538 |
89.4 |
2006 |
46,481 |
51,815 |
89.7 |
2007 |
49,176 |
54,836 |
89.7 |
2008 |
50,943 |
56,732 |
89.8 |
2009 |
50,119 |
55,869 |
89.7 |
2010 |
50,325 |
55,782 |
90.2 |
2011 |
49,357 |
55,013 |
89.7 |
2012p |
49,568 |
55,015 |
90.1 |
Contact
Email: Craig Kellock
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