Health Survey for England - Health, social care and lifestyles
This is an annual survey looking at changes in the health and lifestyles of people all over the country. Find out more and download the latest survey report.
About the survey
The Health Survey for England (HSE) is an important annual survey looking at changes in the health and lifestyles of people all over the country.
Around 8,000 adults and 2,000 children take part in the survey each year. Information is collected through an interview and, if participants agree, a visit from a specially trained nurse.
The surveys, which have been carried out since 1991, provide regular information that cannot be obtained from other sources.
Find out more on the NatCen website.
Due to the COVID-19 pandemic the HSE 2020 survey was stopped in March 2020 and never re-started. There was no publication.
HSE 2024 Survey launched in January 2024 and fieldwork runs until spring 2025. It is envisaged that data will be published in one publication in early 2026.
HSE 2025 will launch in April 2025 and fieldwork will run until summer 2026. The 2025 HSE survey will only cover adults.
NHS England and the Department of Health and Social Care have begun considering future requirements in relation to the Health Survey for England, given a number of factors including the Public Consultation on Health and Care Statistics, the ongoing development of the health mission metrics, advances in statistical methods and challenges with traditional survey sample sizes.
The survey is an important source of population health data to inform policy and DHSC are keen to ensure they have continued and increasingly high quality data for key population health indicators in the Health Mission, and we mitigate resource pressures in NHSE and DHSC.
Ministerial approval has been given for NHS England to run one further round of the survey to cover 2025 and 2026, while the Office for National Statistics and DHSC lead work to develop plans for ensuring robust data to underpin statistical requirements, including consideration of the health mission, from 2027 onwards.
This new solution will not necessarily be constrained only to consider replacements for data currently delivered via HSE, but will also consider wider population health requirements for the health mission as well as provision of data at local level. The solution will also not be constrained to only consider a like-for-like replacement for HSE as it may be possible to source some metrics similar to those in HSE from existing surveys or administrative data collections.
Any users wishing to provide input into the redevelopment are welcome to share their contact details via [email protected] and colleagues will be in touch.
Health Survey for England steering group
The Health Survey for England steering group directs the design, development, implementation and delivery of the survey.
The role includes:
- providing direction and recommendations on priorities relating to the Health Survey for England
- considering representations in relation to the needs of data users
- considering, agreeing and approving changes in data to be collected, methodology, questionnaires, sample design, processing and presentation of results
Find out more about the steering group.
Survey review
The HSE surveys are reviewed yearly by an independent group of people called a Research Ethics Committee, to protect the safety, rights, wellbeing and dignity of those taking part.
The 2025 survey will be reviewed by the East Midlands - Nottingham 2 Research Ethics Committee.
Why we do this survey
The HSE provides vital information, which is used by central government (the Department of Health and Social Care, and Public Health England) and local government for a range of different purposes, including:
- monitoring changes in health and lifestyles
- monitoring the prevalence of specific health conditions
- planning services
- policy development
- monitoring and evaluating policy
Local authorities also use the survey to compare local indicators with national figures. Other organisations include NHS England, other NHS bodies, charities and voluntary organisations. The survey is also widely used by academics and researchers from UK universities.
Examples of how information from the HSE has been used include:
- It found that lots of older people weren't aware that they had kidney disease and that levels of undiagnosed kidney disease are significantly higher than the official diagnosed levels - this issue inspired action to tackle the problem
- HSE is used to measure how many people are reaching the 5-a-day government target on fruit and vegetable consumption
- HSE found that many people didn't know they had high blood pressure, which can cause serious health problems - doctors now check blood pressure more regularly
- Data from the survey is used as a component in the formula allocating public health grants from the Department of Health and Social Care to local authorities
Participants
Addresses are chosen at random, meaning every address in England has an equal chance of being included. This ensures that we get a truly representative picture of people living in private households in England.
What the survey involves
After you've received a letter asking you to take part, one of NatCen's interviewers will call at your home to arrange an interview at a time that suits you. You can say no if you don’t want to take part, but the interview itself is relaxed and there's nothing to prepare. You can skip any questions you don't want to answer.
Your interviewer will ask you about a range of topics including your health and aspects of your lifestyle that can affect it. Again you do not have to answer any questions you don’t want to, you can just skip on to the next one.
During the interview we will also ask your permission for a nurse to visit. You can find out more information about what’s involved on the NatCen taking part webpage.
Confidentiality
The answers
The answers from the questionnaire are put together with the answers collected from thousands of other people across England and the survey findings are published on our webpage. See the Health Survey for England publication series for the latest report. The findings will not identify anyone who took part in the survey.
If you’ve taken part in the survey and you change your mind you can ask for your details to be removed from the survey records. Please contact [email protected] and ask for the Surveys Team to remove your details from the Health Survey for England dataset. We will remove your survey details from the dataset and will no longer process your data, however we won’t be able to change any publications that have already happened.
The survey data
The data will not be presented in a form that can reveal any personal information that could be used to identify individuals. An anonymised dataset will be made available on the UK Data Service Catalogue. The data will be used by researchers within central and local government and academia for not-for-profit research to help improve health and social care services. The UK Data Service is home to the UK's largest collection of digital social and economic research data. The anonymised dataset made available by the UK Data Service has been carefully created following Government Statistical Service disclosure control guidance and removing any information that might identify individuals.
Data collected
The Health Survey for England content page includes information about which topics were included in each year of the survey from 1993 to 2022.
There are core topics for which data is collected regularly including:
- physical health asthma
- mental health and wellbeing
- lifestyle behaviours such as smoking, drinking and dietary habits
- social care
- physical measures such as height, weight, and blood pressure (carried out by nurse visit)
Additional topics can also be included in specific survey years by organisations such as central government, charities, and researchers, subject to funding and space.
In addition, organisations may choose to fund population boosts whereby a larger sample of a particular sub-group are interviewed. This leads to more statistically robust data for that group. Previous boosts include children, ethnic minorities, or certain geographical locations.
Survey dataset
The anonymised Health Survey for England datasets can be accessed via the UK Data Service. Strict measures are in place regarding who can access the data and users will need to agree to the licence conditions about use. Researchers interested in accessing the datasets will need to register with UK Data Service in the first instance.
The dataset is available to researchers in the UK, EEA or those from a country with a suitable adequacy agreement. Requests from researchers from other countries will be reviewed on a case-by-case basis.
Data is available for 1993 to 2021. The data items available will vary each year depending on what questions were asked that year and also disclosure control measures applied to the dataset to protect individuals' rights. The Health Survey for England content page provides at a glance what topics were included each survey year. More specific information about which data items are available for each survey dataset can be found on the UK Data Service website under the HSE survey year of interest.
The latest HSE dataset is 2021 which is available on the UK Data Service website. The HSE dataset for 2022 will be available in the latter half of 2025.
Health Survey for England publications
The Health Survey for England publication series includes links to the latest report and all previous HSE reports published by NHS England.
As well as the standard survey publications we have also published the following:
Health Survey England Additional Analyses, Ethnicity and Health, 2011-2019 Experimental statistics
Health Survey for England predicting height, weight and body mass index from self-reported data
Find out about methodology changes implemented within HSE.
Health Survey England: Explore Health England’s trends dashboard
The Health Survey England dashboard uses data from HSE to monitor the interesting changes and trends in England’s health since the 1990s.
The dashboard shows how the rate of smoking have steadily declined over time, and the prevalence of both obesity and overweight has increased.
Other graphs show the changing proportion of people eating their 5-a day, shifts in the rate of a longstanding illness, and the rise in doctor-diagnosed diabetes, and several other indicators, that help us track our changing health.
Contact us
If you need further information please email [email protected] and ask for your email to be forwarded to the Surveys Team.
Further information
The Health Survey for England is an annual survey that looks at changes in the health and lifestyles of people throughout the country.
Last edited: 14 May 2025 11:08 am