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Leyton Grange, in Leyton, east London, is the second most deprived area of the London Borough of Waltham Forest.It include an estate that consists of a 10-storey tower and ten 4-storey courts owned by Forest Homes (see list below).
The indices are typically ordered from lowest to highest, and grouped into population quintiles. In the 1981, 1991 and 2001 indices, quintile 1 represented the least [33] deprived areas, and quintile 5 represented the most deprived. In 2011, the order was reversed, in line with the ordering of the Scottish Index of Multiple Deprivation.
A subsequent report in 2015 reiterated the area was one of the most deprived English neighbourhoods. [25] According to the Index of Multiple Deprivation of both 2010 and 2015, the western half of the village is the most deprived area of England. [26]
And more than a quarter of people living in “left behind” areas are income deprived (26.7%) – this is higher than across other deprived areas (25.9%) and England as a whole (12.9%).
The analysis included records from 608,278 youngsters living in north-east London aged five to 16. Children in most-deprived areas ‘three times more likely’ to need teeth removed Skip to main ...
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Haringey is the 6th most deprived borough in London, and the 30th most deprived local authority in England (out of 326). Within the borough there are extreme contrasts: [ 26 ] neighbourhoods in some of the western wards, such as Highgate , Muswell Hill and Crouch End are among the most prosperous in the country; in the east of the borough, many ...
Such areas include: Marfleet in Hull, Hartcliffe in Bristol, Hattersley in Greater Manchester, Everton in Liverpool and Sparkbrook in Birmingham. Eight of the ten most deprived areas in Scotland are in Glasgow, and three of the nine worst in Wales are in Cardiff.