Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.The Welsh Government's National Survey for Wales covers a random sample of 12,000 adults a year (aged 16+) living in private households across Wales. The survey provides representative, reliable and up-to-date information about the people of Wales down to local authority level.The survey began in 2012. In 2015 it was reviewed the decision was taken to amalgamate five large scale social surveys that were carried out in Wales into one. From 2016-17 onwards the National Survey for Wales was expanded to include topics previously covered by the Welsh Health Survey, Active Adults Survey, Arts in Wales Survey, and Welsh Outdoor Recreation Survey.The aim of the survey is to provide representative, reliable and up-to-date information about the people of Wales down to local authority level. Prior to March 2020, the survey was carried out face-to-face in respondents’ homes. Since May 2020 onwards, the survey has been carried out by telephone. Topics were updated monthly and results published monthly for May to September 2020; from October, topic updates and publications switched to quarterly.The survey continued in telephone mode for 2021-22 onwards, with an online element added from July 2021. Further information is available on the Welsh Government National Survey for Wales webpages.
Main Topics:
The 2020-21 topics (featured in the survey for at least one month of that year) were: Welsh language Wellbeing Internet use and skills Child online safety Local authority services Local democracy Community cohesion and safety Local environment quality Primary and secondary education General health and illnesses (including COVID-19) Health services – GPs and hospitals Social care services Dental appointments Hearing impairment Eye care Active travel Lifestyle behaviours (fruit and vegetables, alcohol, smoking, exercise, BMI) Material deprivation (household and pensioner) Universal Credit Food poverty Volunteering and caring Employment, fair work, Sport participation and latent demand Loneliness Climate emergency – views Flood risk Biodiversity Armed forces
One-stage stratified or systematic random sample
Telephone interview: Computer-assisted (CATI)