logo
Is YOUR neighbourhood a premature death hotspot? Interactive map reveals the areas of England and Wales where men are most likely to die young

Is YOUR neighbourhood a premature death hotspot? Interactive map reveals the areas of England and Wales where men are most likely to die young

Daily Mail​18-05-2025
Dozens of areas of England and Wales have today been flagged as premature death hotspots.
Blackpool South has the highest premature mortality rate, MailOnline analysis shows. For every 100,000 men living there, nearly 730 died last year before turning 75.
Although that rate appears small, it is 3.4 times higher than in North East Hampshire (214.3 per 100,000) – the area of the country where men have the best chances of avoiding an early grave.
Professor Karol Sikora, an oncologist with 40 years of experience who once advised ministers and acted as the World Health Organization 's cancer chief, described the rate in Blackpool South as 'dreadful'.
He added: 'Anything above 500 is bad news.'
Yet Government figures suggest 76 of the 575 parliamentary constituencies – or one in eight – exceed that rate.
All rates are age-standardised, meaning they factor in the age distribution of different areas, this is because comparing two populations that have different age structures is not fair.
How are premature deaths calculated?
Someone is counted as dying prematurely if they die before the age of 75.
Statisticians use age-standardised mortality rates to allow comparison between populations which may contain different proportions of people of different ages.
This is because age is the biggest factor when it comes to mortality rates.
For example, a neighbourhood home to swathes of over-60s would, in theory, record more premature deaths than a student hotspot.
Therefore, factoring in the ages of the two places would allow a fairer comparison on relative mortality experience in each area, according to experts.
The rate is usually per 100,000 population.
Professor Sikora said: 'These scores reflect poverty.
'People with less money have less education, and they tend to have more unhealthy lifestyles, from everything to smoking, alcohol, obesity, everything you can imagine, lack of exercise, poor diets, poor housing conditions.
'All this leads to illness, and that leads to earlier mortality.
'It is bound to get worse without major policy changes.'
However, Professor Sikora points out that not all communities face the same outcomes.
He said: 'There are some exceptions. I mean, it's quite amazing. For example, the South Asian population in Slough live remarkably long, and they do remarkably well, and they tend not to be obese. So it's not just poverty, it's a whole series of things around it.'
The original mortality data, held by the Office for National Statistics (ONS), lay bare a clear North-South divide.
Out of the 20 constituencies with the worst premature death rates, 13 of them were in the north and three in the Midlands.
For comparison, 16 out of 20 areas with the lowest figures were in the south.
Behind Blackpool South came Middleborough and Thornaby East (685.8) and Leeds South (670.4).
Premature deaths may happen from illnesses such as cancer, heart disease, injuries, violence and even suicide.
Although Professor Sikora explains the main driver of premature mortality is lifestyle, he says a secondary factor is access to healthcare.
He said: 'We have a free system, the NHS. But we know that poorer people access it differently from wealthier people, even though it's free.
'So it's not so much wealth. It's education. The better educated people can use a complex system more effectively than people who have no education.
'They just know how not to get aggressive, because getting aggressive doesn't help, but how to push for what they want in a quiet sort of way, and so access to health care.'
Professor Sikora also points out that the best specialists and the best GPs often choose to live in the most desirable areas, not in deprived areas.
The ONS data, which defines a premature death to be anything before 75, does not include Scotland or Northern Ireland.
The analysis comes after a study last year concluded one in four premature deaths will be due to cancer between 2023 and 2050.
This equates to around 50,000 per year, according to the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD).
It warned that the 'current trajectory of cancer costs is unsustainable'.
Professor Sikora says cancer deaths often follow the same pattern as other deaths, with lifestyle factors such as smoking, alcohol, obesity, lack of exercise, poor quality, diet, all posing risks.
He also said poorer people are less likely to access treatment as they don't go for screening, don't have mammograms and don't turn up for tests when they're asked to.
'They often just don't bother going to the hospital, or when they do, they go when it's late. They haven't got the money to get on public transport and get there. So they just skip the hospital appointments and so on', he said.
Peter Matejic, chief analyst at the poverty fighting charity Joseph Rowntree Foundation, said: 'It's heartbreaking that some areas have such high rates of premature deaths.
'We have known that there are links between poverty and worse health outcomes for decades, and as a nation that is a gap we should be narrowing.
'Many factors throughout your life can lead to dying prematurely, but your economic situation affects your health at every stage, from what you eat as a child to whether you can afford essentials as an adult.
'The nation's health needs a real focus from the government but this isn't just about the NHS – it's about whether people are able to lead healthy lives with dignity and hope.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Northampton hospital 'had A&E patients in chairs for 22 hours'
Northampton hospital 'had A&E patients in chairs for 22 hours'

BBC News

time28 minutes ago

  • BBC News

Northampton hospital 'had A&E patients in chairs for 22 hours'

A hospital where A&E patients were left waiting in chairs for 22 hours has been downgraded by General Hospital's Care Quality Commission (CQC) grading has been changed from good to requires improvement following the surprise inspection in February, which found three breaches of legal regulations in relation to safe care and treatment, safe staffing and health watchdog issued the hospital with a warning notice because of overcrowding in the emergency department and poor flow of patients through different stages of hospital has apologised to patients and says it has "undertaken significant work" to address the concerns since the inspection. CQC inspectors who visited the emergency department found "widespread care... in ambulances, waiting rooms and corridors".They recorded that, on the afternoon of 19 February 2025, the department had almost double its capacity of patients and the longest wait for a bed was 46 CQC said: "Patients were waiting on chairs for over 22 hours, including elderly patients." Alarms were sounding to indicate that some people were deteriorating but there were no resuscitation beds for patient who was identified as being at risk of pressure sores, and had been in the department for 25 hours, had been given no mitigation inspectors spoke to patients in medical wards, they were told there was no privacy because extra beds had been brought into the CQC said patients were not always being discharged at the point when they no longer needed medical treatment as were staying for an average of 16.6 days, which was significantly higher than the England average of 11.7 days. The inspectors said they had observed a clinical emergency in an area where additional beds had been placed in bays. The "space for additional staff and equipment was compromised but staff ensured this did not compromise... the treatment", their report also found there were instances where medication given to patients was not accurately at the hospital did not always "work with staff when incidents happen to identify what went wrong", the report of regulations were found in safety of treatment, staffing and inspectors did find leaders and staff worked closely together to deliver care and staff understood their responsibilities for safeguarding and protecting people from harm. The medical director of University Hospitals of Northamptonshire, Hemant Nemade, said: "We are truly sorry that we have not provided the level of care that our communities need and deserve."Since the inspection was carried out in February 2025, we have undertaken significant work to address the CQC's concerns."Many new processes are now in place to improve and monitor safety and care, enhance privacy and dignity and improve how we support patients." Follow Northamptonshire news on BBC Sounds, Facebook, Instagram and X.

The deadly cancers left behind by 50 years of success
The deadly cancers left behind by 50 years of success

BBC News

time3 hours ago

  • BBC News

The deadly cancers left behind by 50 years of success

The number of people surviving cancer has improved hugely in the past 50 years, but experts warn progress has been uneven with some of the cancers with the worst survival rates falling further some, including melanoma skin cancer, 10-year survival is now above 90%, while for all cancers, half of patients can expect to live that long - double the figure in the early a study by the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine said there had been little improvement in those affecting the oesophagus, stomach and lungs - and less than 5% survive pancreatic cancer for 10 government said it was committed to making more progress with a new strategy due soon. The researchers said advances in treatment and earlier detection were behind the improvements in survival seen for many cancer is a perfect example of this, with 10-year survival rates rising from 42% to more than 76% between 1971 and 2018 in England and period saw the introduction of an NHS breast screening programme, plus targeted therapies for different types of breast comparison, the cancers with the lowest survival rates tend to be the hardest to detect and have the fewest treatment pancreatic cancer, the study says these include oesophagus, stomach and lung cancers, which all still have 10-year survival rates below 20%, after only a small amount of progress since the has meant the gap between the cancers with the best and worst survival rates has nearly doubled. 'Amazing job' Matt Black is someone with first-hand experience of how the type of cancer you get makes a huge 2019 the 60-year-old lost his sister, Harriette, to pancreatic cancer, 20 years after his father-in-law died of oesophageal years ago he was diagnosed with bowel cancer which has above average survival rates. Soon after developing symptoms he had surgery and was given the all-clear."NHS staff do an amazing job, but it's such a difficult time to be a cancer patient, especially for those with cancers which aren't easy to spot or treat. "It's so important that there is more research and support for cancer services here, so that more people can be as fortunate as me," says Matt. The researchers also warned that, while overall survival was still improving, the rate of progress had slowed during the 2010s. Longer waits for diagnosis and treatment are thought to be partly to blame. Michelle Mitchell, chief executive of Cancer Research UK, which funded the study, said: "Thanks to research, most patients today are far more likely to survive cancer than at any other point in the past."But the reality is that this progress is slowing – and for some cancers it never got going in the first place."The charity wants the government's forthcoming strategy to focus on:cutting waiting timesearly detection, including full introduction of a lung cancer screening programmeinvestment in research, particularly targeting the most deadly cancersA Department of Health and Social Care spokesman said cancer care was a priority. with some progress already made on waiting times."The national cancer plan will set out how we will improve survival rates further and address the unacceptable variation between different cancer types," he added.

Calling all learner drivers - there are some new theory test questions on the way
Calling all learner drivers - there are some new theory test questions on the way

Sky News

time4 hours ago

  • Sky News

Calling all learner drivers - there are some new theory test questions on the way

Learner drivers will now be quizzed on their life-saving CPR skills when taking their theory tests. The new questions on CPR and defibrillators will be added to theory tests from early next year. "Part of being a safe and responsible driver is knowing what to do in an emergency - how to step in and make a real, life-saving difference," said Driver and Vehicle Standards Agency (DVSA) chief driving examiner Mark Winn. "Learning CPR and how to use a defibrillator is a very simple skill." More than 40,000 people in the UK suffer an out-of-hospital cardiac arrest every year and motorists are often first on the scene, according to the DVSA. However, fewer than one in 10 people survive. If CPR is given and a defibrillator used within three to five minutes of collapse, though, survival rates can be as high as 70%. 'Life-saving' A father whose 24-year-old daughter died in 2017 from complications following a cardiac arrest led the calls for this change. "When Claire, my daughter, had her cardiac arrest, some knowledge of CPR might have made a difference," said Professor Len Nokes, chair of Save a Life Cymru. "I don't want any other family to go through this experience. "All of us in this partnership hope that by making CPR and how to use a defibrillator part of the theory test, we will be able to significantly increase the number of people who have this life-saving awareness." In order to book a practical driving test, learner drivers must first pass their theory test with at least 43 out of 50 correct answers. They must also pass a hazard perception test.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store