13th November 2024
The Scottish Health Survey 2023 results, published today, provide information on the health, and factors relating to health, of adults and children in Scotland.
Almost a third of adults (32%) were living with obesity, the highest level recorded and an increase from 24% in 2003.
Over a fifth of younger adults were using e-cigarettes or vaping. Twelve per cent of adults were current e-cigarette or vaping device users, an increase from 10% in 2022. The proportion was highest for adults aged 16-24 (22%).
Fourteen per cent of adults reported experiencing food insecurity, an increase from 9% in 2021 and the highest level since the time series began in 2017.
Drinking at hazardous or harmful levels continued to decrease, from 34% of adults in 2003 to 20% in 2023. The proportion of males that drank to hazardous or harmful levels was twice as high as for females (28% and 14% respectively).
Mental wellbeing and mental ill health returned to similar levels to those reported in 2021, following an increase in 2022. Average Warwick-Edinburgh Mental Wellbeing (WEMWBS) scores for adults increased to 48.9, up from 47.0 in 2022 and 48.6 in 2021. The proportion of adults with a GHQ-12 score of 4 or more (21%), indicative of a possible psychiatric disorder, returned to a similar level to 2021 (22%) following an increase to 27% in 2022.
Other key findings show that in 2023:
One in ten adults (10%) reported feeling lonely ‘most' or ‘all of the time', similar to the level reported in 2022 (11%). Adults aged 16-24 (19%) and those living in the most deprived areas (14%) were the most likely to report feeling like this in the past week.
Adult prevalence of limiting long-term conditions was 38%, similar to 2022 (37%) and continuing the general upward trend.
Prevalence of any CVD (excluding diabetes or high blood pressure) remained at 15% of adults.
More than one in two adults (57%) reported having ever undertaken cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) training and one in five adults (18%) had undertaken CPR training in the last two years.
Fourteen per cent of adults reported being unpaid carers, similar to levels in recent years (14-16% since 2016).
Eight per cent of adults and 2% of children reported currently having long COVID (compared to 5% of adults and 1% of children in 2021).
Two per cent of adults reported that they had long COVID and it limited their ability to carry out day-to-day activities ‘a lot.'
The proportion of adults reporting difficulties when visiting the dentist (34%) has increased since 2019 (20%) and 2021 (23%), returning to a similar level to 2009 (35%).
The proportion of adults meeting the recommended levels of physical activity (63%) was not significantly lower than in 2022 (65%) and remained within the overall range recorded between 2012 and 2022 (62-69%).
Around one in seven (15%) adults were current smokers, the same proportion as in 2022.
Fourteen per cent of adults reported drug use during the last 12 months. Prevalence was highest for those aged 16-34 (26%-27%)