Data set from Children looked after in England including adoptions

CLA ceasing during the year by characteristics - NATIONAL

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Children who ceased to be looked after during the year by gender, age on ceasing, reason episode ceased, legal status, category of need, ethnicity, placement and duration of latest period of care. Data formerly in tables D1, D2 and D3.


Data set details

Theme
Children's social care
Publication
Children looked after in England including adoptions
Release type
Geographic levels
National
Indicators
  • Number
  • Percentage
Filters
  • Characteristic
Time period
2018 to 2021

Data set preview

Table showing first 5 rows, from underlying data
time_identifiertime_periodgeographic_levelcountry_codecountry_namecla_groupcharacteristicnumberpercent
Reporting year2021NationalE92000001EnglandAge on ceasing1 to 4 years598021
Reporting year2021NationalE92000001EnglandAge on ceasing10 to 15 years374013
Reporting year2021NationalE92000001EnglandAge on ceasing16 years12104
Reporting year2021NationalE92000001EnglandAge on ceasing17 years13305
Reporting year2021NationalE92000001EnglandAge on ceasing5 to 9 years330012

Variables in this data set

Table showing all 3 variables
Variable nameVariable description
characteristicCharacteristic
numberNumber
percentPercentage

Footnotes

  1. In 2021, 65% of all children who were stated as ceasing due to other reasons left care on their 18th birthday.
  2. Numbers have been rounded to the nearest 10. Percentages and averages rounded to the nearest whole number. See the methodology document for further information. Figures exclude children looked after under a series of short-term placements. Historical data may differ from older publications which is mainly due to amendments made by local authorities after the previous publication.
  3. No new applications for freeing orders may be made on or after 30 December 2005, they were replaced by placement orders.
  4. 'Youth justice legal statuses' refers to children: remanded to LA accommodation or youth detention accommodation under the Legal Aid, Sentencing and Punishment of Offenders Act 2012; placed in LA accommodation under the Police and Criminal Evidence Act 1984; or, sentenced to a youth rehabilitation order with residence or intensive fostering requirement under the Criminal Justice and Immigration Act 2008 (as amended).
  5. In 2021 there were 13 secure units in England, therefore most placements will inevitably be outside the council boundary.
  6. Only the last occasion a child ceased to be looked after has been counted.
  7. 'Aged 18 (or over) and remained with current carers' was a new category introduced in 2021. It's likely many of these children were previously reported within the 'care ceased for any other reason'.
  8. Period of care refers to a continuous period of being looked after, which may include more than one placement or legal status.
  9. FFA relates to Fostering for Adoption. Foster placements 'not FFA or concurrent planning' include children in long term foster placements.
  10. Category of need is the main category of the eight “need codes” at the time the child started to be looked after.
  11. National and regional numbers have been rounded to the nearest 10. Rates rounded to the nearest whole number. See the methodology document for further information. Figures exclude children looked after under a series of short-term placements. Historical data may differ from older publications which is mainly due to amendments made by local authorities after the previous publication.

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