04/09/2020 New lookup table and boundaries file have been added to the geography folder to enable analysis to be done at the Local Authority level which has recently been added to the published Google Mobility data.
07/05/2020 Revised lookup tables and boundaries file have been provided in the geography folder to reflect the changes made in the published Google Mobility data in the separation of Nottingham and Nottinghamshire.
17/04/2020: Google now make this data available in csv format format, please source the data from there and note the additional documentation. There will be small differences between the data we have extracted up until now and that published, usually that is around +/- 1% due to rounding.
Archive of data related to the Google Community Mobility Reports published 03/04/2020 and 10/04/2020.
This repository contains data extracted from Google Community Mobility Reports published on the 03/04/2020 and 10/04/2020, together with supporting boundaries based on the current UK administrative geography to allow mapping and linking with other sources of data.
The latest data is available in Microsoft Office .xlsx format here, which includes the entire data extracted from the UK report, as well as other international reports. Other datasets include:
- International country-level trends for G20 countries (excl. China, Russia, EU) and Sweden; CSV file
- International regional trends for G20 countries (excl. China, Russia, EU) and Sweden; CSV file
- UK and UK region trends; CSV file
- UK headline values; CSV file
- International headline values; CSV file
- International country-level trends for G20 countries (excl. China, Russia, EU) and Sweden; CSV file
- International regional trends for G20 countries (excl. China, Russia, EU) and Sweden; CSV file
- UK Boundary Geography files; CSV and GPKG files
Headline data for all countries is available from Matt Kerlogue's repository
The Data Science Campus has extracted the data from Google’s UK report, and other international reports, to make them publicly available to all. We developed this Python tool (mobius) to achieve this.
The insights are drawn from changes in visits and lengths of stay for different types of locations indexed against median levels, for the same day of the week, over the period 3rd January - 6th February 2020 (for the original data). Google uses aggregated, anonymized sets of data from users who have turned on the Location History setting (off by default). Google caution that the location accuracy and the understanding of categorized places will vary between regions and so advice against using it to compare changes between countries, or between regions with different characteristics (e.g. rural versus urban areas) - please see Google's documentation for more details.
Figure 1: UK trends chart from Google Community Mobility Reports published on the 03/04/2020.
Data and methodology cannot be QA’d directly by the Campus and is provided on an ‘as-is’ basis.
The Data Science Campus has created a python tool (https://github.com/datasciencecampus/mobility-report-data-extractor) for extracting the data points from the graphs for Google Community Mobility Report PDFs. To use this tool, the PDF documents need to be converted to Scalable Vector Graphic (SVG) format. The Campus has converted all PDF documents to SVG documents for this tool. These SVG files are used in mobius
to obtain a Comma Separated Value (CSV) file for each graph in the original report.
This repository contains the CSV files for all G20 countries for national and regional graphs.
The set of boundaries provided in the geopackage is draft, and has been created by ONS in order to promote information sharing and analysis of the effect of COVID19.
The boundaries have been tailored specifically to present ‘Community Mobility’ data (first published by Google on 3 April 2020) recast to administrative boundaries.
The data published by Google covers all of the UK based on the normal Government Statistical Service (GSS) assignment to 2019 administrative areas - with 3 exceptions. The Unitary Authorities of Bournemouth, Christchurch and Poole; and Telford and Wrekin are missing. In building the boundaries provided here we have assumed that Google have included data for these missing areas within Dorset and Shropshire. Although they do not reflect the current administrative geography we have made use of Ceremonial County versions of Dorset and Shropshire to ensure full geographic coverage of the UK. These boundaries do not reflect current administrative boundaries so care should be taken in how they are used and they should only be used to understand the results published by Google. Further versions of these boundaries may be made available if we are able confirm more details but they are provided here in the hope that they will be helpful to others.
The 2018 mid-year population estimates for the UK have been linked to the custom lookup created by ONS. A Standard Area Measurement based on those produced by ONS Geography has also been included for each area (calculated in hectares). This allows measures such as population density to be calculated.