Bellahouston, Craigton and Mosspark

The profiles on these pages provide a comprehensive overview of health and wellbeing in Glasgow. There are 60 profiles in total, covering Glasgow as a whole, the three sub-sectors of the city (North East, North West and South Glasgow) and 56 neighbourhoods across the city. They highlight differences in health and life circumstances across the city for a range of indicators organised under broad themes: population; cultural factors; environment and transport; socioeconomic factors; education; poverty; and health. The profiles are intended to be a resource for local communities and to inform action at neighbourhood level.

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Bellahouston, Craigton and Mosspark

A printer friendly version of this sector profile can be downloaded here

Bellahouston, Craigton and Mosspark is a neighbourhood in the south of Glasgow with a population of 8,948.

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Neighbourhood comparisons with Glasgow

Women in Bellahouston, Craigton and Mosspark live, on average, six and a half years longer than men.  The estimates of both male and female life expectancy in Bellahouston, Craigton and Mosspark are above the Glasgow average. The area has a high proportion of owner occupied households and a low proportion of children in poverty compared to the Glasgow average. There is a high proportion of people limited by disability.

16Bellahouston  Craigton and Mosspark   Spine
Neighbourhood trends
16Bellahouston  Craigton and Mosspark   Charts1
Life expectancy for both males and females has risen in recent years in Bellahouston, Craigton and Mosspark, staying above the Glasgow average.  In the most recent period shown (2008-12), life expectancy was slightly lower than the Scottish average for both men and women.

16Bellahouston  Craigton and Mosspark   Charts2
The overall population of Bellahouston, Craigton and Mosspark stayed roughly the same between 1996 and 2012. There was a sizeable drop in the population aged 65 and over, but growth in the other population categories. The percentage of the total neighbourhood population from a minority ethnic group increased from 5% in 2001 to 9% in 2011, but remained below the Glasgow average in 2001 and 2011.

Notes

A document giving detailed notes and definitions for the information presented in this profile can be downloaded here.

An Excel workbook containing the data used in all of the profiles can be downloaded here. This workbook also includes alternative output formats and further breakdowns of some of the variables.

1. Data sources: Scottish Index of Multiple Deprivation (SIMD) 2012, Census 2011, Census 2001, HMRC, NOMIS, National Records of Scotland (NRS) and Scottish Government.
2. Populations presented in the population trend chart and used to calculate life expectancy estimates are taken from NRS small area population estimates and are based on: the 2001 census for the years 1996 - 2001; both the 2001 and 2011 census for the years 2002 - 2010; and the 2011 census for the years 2011-2012.
3. The Income deprivation and Employment deprivation indicators are derived from SIMD 2012, more information on this deprivation index can be found at: http://simd.scotland.gov.uk/publication-2012
4. Life expectancies are calculated based on population estimates and death registrations. 95% confidence intervals have been added on the graphs to give an indication of their accuracy. The x-axes of the life expectancy graphs give the mid-year for each life expectancy estimate e.g. 2010 represents the life expectancy estimate for the period 2008 – 2012.

Glasgow City Council have also produced neighbourhood profiles based on data from the 2011 Census which can be accessed via this link.