Please note that the borough level data should be interpreted with caution, Covid-19 had a significant impact on data collection and the caveats for the data can be found below.

Activity Levels Amongst Children and Young People in Stockport

The Chief Medical Officer (CMO) recommends that all children and young people achieve 60 minutes of physical activity a day, in Stockport almost half of young people achieve this. Concerningly, three in ten do not even achieve 30 minutes of physical activity every day, this is below both the National and the Greater Manchester (GM) average for less active. 

Borough comparisons of less active

The proportion of children moving (achieving an average of at least 30 minutes physical activity a day) in Stockport has seen no significant change since the Active Lives Children and Young People Survey launched in 2017/18. 

Stockport change over time

Children and Young People in Stockport

The levels of physical activity in Stockport are important because:

  • One in five (17.9%) children leave primary school overweight or obese, we know that physical activity has a role to play in these figures and this was highlighted by the Chief Medical Officer with active travel and physical activity being highlighted as approaches to tackle childhood obesity.
  • One quarter (25.9%) of children are classified as living in poverty in Stockport (after housing costs) according to End Child Poverty. The Active Lives Survey shows us that those young people from less affluent households are more likely to be less active. 

Data Caveats

  1. Some of the data has been suppressed because they have less than 150 responses in total or only 1-2 responding schools in the Local Authority meaning the data is insufficiently reliable
  2. Whilst there may be a change compared to baseline (2017/18) or last years release (2018/19) the reliability and validity of assessing change is affected by the fact that certain school phases or terms may be missing within the data.

Activity levels differ by term, and so where you are not comparing like for like the result will be different due to the profile, not solely through a genuine change – if there is a genuine change this will be hard to unpick. In the case of large changes you might assume the scale is exaggerated but the direction is likely, with smaller changes we would recommend not relying on these. The same applies with school phases.

February 2020