Variable

UK Data Service variable record for:

Health Survey for England, 2005

Variable Details

Variablestnssec
LabelNS-SEC - long version
Responses
1 Employers in large organisations 5
2 Higher managerial occupations 375
3.1 Higher professional occupations - Traditional employee 386
3.2 Higher professional occupations - New employee 97
3.3 Higher professional occupations - Traditional self-employed 96
3.4 Higher professional occupations - New self-employed 19
4.1 Lower professional & higher technical - Traditional employee 1117
4.2 Lower professional & higher technical - New employee 59
4.3 Lower professional & higher technical - Traditional self-emp 109
4.4 Lower professional & higher technical - New self-employed 8
5 Lower managerial occupations 572
6 Higher supervisory occupations 310
7.1 Intermediate clerical and administrative 787
7.2 Intermediate sales and service 364
7.3 Intermediate technical and auxiliary 130
7.4 Intermediate engineering 43
8.1 Employers in small organisations - non-professional 215
8.2 Employers in small organisations - agriculture 21
9.1 Own account workers - non-professional 608
9.2 Own account workers - agriculture 27
10 Lower supervisory occupations 582
11.1 Lower technical craft 279
11.2 Lower technical process operative 84
12.1 Semi-routine sales 597
12.2 Semi-routine service 655
12.3 Semi-routine technical 154
12.4 Semi-routine operative 218
12.5 Semi-routine agricultural 30
12.6 Semi-routine clerical 173
12.7 Semi-routine childcare 87
13.1 Routine sales and service 231
13.2 Routine production 218
13.3 Routine technical 429
13.4 Routine operative 633
13.5 Routine agricultural 12
14 Never worked & long-term unemployed 325
15 Full-time students 189
16 Occupations not stated or inadequately described 21
17 Not classifiable for other reasons 0
-9 No answer/refused 0
-8 Don't know 0
-7 Refused/not obtained 0
-6 Schedule not obtained 0
-2 Schedule not applicable 0
-1 Item not applicable 3032
DisclaimerPlease note that these frequencies are not weighted.
LocationHealth Survey for England, 2005
UniverseAdults (aged 16 and over) and children (aged 0-15 years) in the general population, living in private households in England during 2005. Boost samples of children aged 2-15 and people aged 65 years and over were also included.;National
SamplingMulti-stage stratified random sample
Study TypeRepeated cross-sectional study. The survey is conducted annually.