Variable

UK Data Service variable record for:

Infant Feeding Survey, 2005

Variable Details

Variableacorn
LabelACORN Type
Responses
1 Wealthy mature professionals, large houses 79
2 Wealthy working families with mortgages 115
3 Villages with wealthy commuters 192
4 Well-off managers, larger houses 170
5 Older affluent professionals 109
6 Farming communities 172
7 Old people, detached homes 128
8 Mature couples, smaller detached homes 105
9 Larger families, prosperous suburbs 149
10 Well-off working families with mortgages 325
11 Well-off managers, detached houses 281
12 Large families and houses in rural areas 6
13 Well-off professionals, larger houses and converted flats 84
14 Older professionals in detached houses and apartments 121
15 Affluent urban professionals, flats 66
16 Prosperous young professionals, flats 50
17 Young educated workers, flats 40
18 Multi-ethnic young, converted flats 43
19 Suburban privately renting professionals 72
20 Student flats and cosmopolitan sharers 51
21 Singles and sharers, multi-ethnic areas 105
22 Low income singles, small rented flats 105
23 Student terraces 43
24 Young couples, flats and terraces 108
25 White collar singles and sharers, terraces 134
26 Younger white collar couples with mortgages 290
27 Middle income, home owning areas 318
28 Working families with mortgages 224
29 Mature families in suburban semis 192
30 Established home owning workers 274
31 Home owning Asian family areas 42
32 Retired home owners 37
33 Middle income, older couples 140
34 Lower income people, semis 156
35 Elderly singles, purpose built flats 26
36 Older people, flats 145
37 Crowded Asian terraces 31
38 Low income Asian families 57
39 Skilled older family terraces 226
40 Young family workers 187
41 Skilled workers, semis and terraces 311
42 Home owning, terraces 286
43 Older rented terraces 143
44 Low income larger families, semis 276
45 Older people, low income, small semis 224
46 Low income, routine jobs, unemployment 206
47 Low rise terraced estates of poorly-off workers 188
48 Low incomes, high unemployment, single parents 179
49 Large families, many children, poorly educated 108
50 Council flats, single elderly people 98
51 Council terraces, unemployment, many singles 135
52 Council flats, single parents, unemployment 125
53 Old people in high rise flats 28
54 Singles and single parents, high rise estates 110
55 Multi-ethnic purpose built estates 57
56 Multi-ethnic, crowded flats 37
57 Unclassified 0
98 Northern Ireland 1605
99 Unclassified 102
DisclaimerPlease note that these frequencies are not weighted.
LocationInfant Feeding Survey, 2005