What makes a robust wellbeing framework? A new discussion paper from the Centre for Thriving Places, supported by Carnegie UK, has analysed eight models to identify shared core elements. Our Executive Director, Nancy Hey, was one of the advisers on the project.
Here, our Head of Implementation Joanne Smithson takes us through the key insights, and explores how to find – and tailor – the right framework for your specific context.
We bring together evidence on what works to improve wellbeing and help others to use this shared knowledge in practice. Wellbeing frameworks can help us understand which factors make the greatest impact on how we are doing, and track our progress as we work to improve this.
Wellbeing is an essential complement to purely economic measures of success, particularly Gross Domestic Product. A number of wellbeing frameworks are now being used at local, national and international levels, including the ONS Measures of National Wellbeing dashboard, which measures how the UK is doing across 10 domains, using 44 indicators.
Key findings from The Shared Ingredients for a Wellbeing Economy paper
This newly published discussion paper explores the wide range of wellbeing frameworks available at the local level in the UK, as well as putting that into context alongside some of the sub-national, national and international models, dashboards and indices.
To do this, it looks at eight existing frameworks:
- The Thriving Places Index from the Centre for Thriving Places
- The SEED Model from Carnegie UK;
- The Doughnut Economy Model from Kate Raworth and Doughnut Economics Action Lab
- The UN Sustainable Development Goals
- The Well-being of Future Generations (Wales) Act
- The Scottish National Performance Framework
- The Office for National Statistics Measures of National Wellbeing Dashboard
- The OECD Better Life Index
By comparing these models, the paper finds that there is now an emerging consensus on what drives improvements in quality of life and how to deliver it. Although there are variations in emphasis and language in the frameworks, and the organisations championing their adoption offer different types and levels of support, tools and guidance, what emerges is a welcome coherence about the ingredients for an equitable and sustainable wellbeing economy.
The paper identifies three headline goals of wellbeing frameworks:
- Thriving – delivering the conditions for people to thrive and flourish.
- Fair – delivering this with equity, so everyone benefits.
- Green – delivering sustainably so the planet and future generations can also thrive.
Looking below those headlines, the paper identifies eight themes – or domains, buckets or baskets – that all of the models analysed consider important:
The paper concludes with a call to action for those leading change in organisations, neighbourhoods, towns and regions to use wellbeing frameworks alongside evidence of ‘what works’ to direct policy and practice.
The important takeaway here is that there isn’t a single wellbeing framework that is best – it’s more important to choose one that is most likely to work in your context, and where you can evaluate its impact in improving the wellbeing of people and communities and reducing wellbeing inequalities.
What does this mean in practice?
If there isn’t a ‘best in class’ – how do you choose? A wellbeing ‘lens’ helps us make sense of complex policy goals and impacts. Our research and practice into local government policy making to maximise wellbeing suggests that successful frameworks build from the dominant policy aim and are tailored to the spatial area they are operating across.
If you are approaching wellbeing from public health, Prof. Sir Michael Marmot provides your justification:
“Making wellbeing rather than straightforward economic performance the central goal of policy will create a better society with better health and greater health equity.” – The Marmot Review ten years on, p.150 (Marmot et. al. 2020).
If you are working at a regional, county or unitary level, the new wellbeing domain in OHID’s Fingertips Mental Health and Wellbeing Joint Strategic Needs Assessment (JSNA) profile provides a solid starting framework of core wellbeing data.
This practice example from Redcar and Cleveland Borough Council describes how they tailored the Local Needs for Wellbeing Data framework – the same framework behind the wellbeing profile in Fingertips – to fit their needs as a coastal authority. They included additional local measures of beach and water quality; measures of leisure and arts activities linked to tourism and heritage assets; and key findings from the Chief Medical Officer’s report on Health in Coastal Communities, including data on local employment opportunities.
If you are approaching wellbeing from an inclusive economy perspective, the Centre for Thriving Places’ Thriving Places Index provides a compelling communication tool to engage citizens and diverse stakeholders in developing a wellbeing approach to change. Another important distinction here is its ability to be tailored to a wide range of geographies and used in smaller areas.
The priority for Camden Council in developing their wellbeing framework, was gaining a deeper understanding of how residents were doing and the reality of their lived experience. Their starting point was a hyper-local project in Euston, to test an approach and implementation on a small scale, before extending out to the whole borough. Their wellbeing framework, built from resident engagement in the Good Life Euston project, identified six domains they describe as ‘states of being’ with systemic equity and positive state of being as headline goals.
There is strong consensus between the six domains Camden developed and the eight themes identified in the new discussion paper as key components of a solid wellbeing framework:
- Secure livelihoods
- Community richness, cultures and identities
- Environmental revitalisation;
- Our spaces and services
- Positive connections
- Formal and informal learning
At the other end of the spatial geography spectrum, working at a national level, New Zealand’s Living Standards Framework chose to tailor and evolve the OECD’s Better Life Index. The framework was most recently updated in 2021 and it now incorporates children’s wellbeing and country-specific aspects of culture, including indigenous concepts, at the newly introduced Institutions and Governance level.
Next steps
Local decision-makers can use the resources below to help understand the wellbeing of their constituents and communities and take action to improve wellbeing:
- Read the discussion paper
- Explore the Local Needs for Wellbeing Data Framework
- Read the Redcar and Cleveland practice example
- Read the Camden Council practice example
- See more examples and an overview of concepts in our publication Wellbeing evidence at the heart of policy
- Read our review on what works to improve wellbeing across different interventions evaluated using ONS4 to systematically identify and summarise evidence from evaluations that use wellbeing frameworks and standardised measures.
- Listen to this podcast on how wellbeing frameworks are used in practice
- Read evidence from the the House of Lords Covid 19 Committee on Measuring Wellbeing
- Use our wellbeing policy making self-assessment tool to strengthen your wellbeing policy making
“If decision makers at every level of the UK and beyond choose to use this evidence and these models, and to benefit from the level of resource available to support them, there is real potential for rewiring the economy to crack the many social and environmental crises facing us all.” – Liz Zeidler, Chief Executive of the Centre for Thriving Places
когда вокруг творится зло и нельзя
вмешаться, навести порядок,
защитить? Главный герой этого
романа – дон Румата (землянин Антон),
который попадает на планету Арканар с экспериментальным миром.
На этой планете царит средневековая жестокость, фальшь и борьба
за власть. Но Румата не должен вмешиваться.
Он ученый, который проводит эксперимент.
Однако человек в нем берет вверх над ученым,
сердце побеждает рассудок. Разве можно спокойно наблюдать,
как зло побеждает добро, как талант растаптывается, а справедливости не существует?
Главному герою это не удается…
Трудно быть Богом