The new figures were one of the 10 people aged 16 and in England and Wales. Domestic misconduct victims, Sexual attack or Follow To march in the year.
Data, published by National Statistics Office (ONS) On Thursday, for the first time there is an estimate domestic abuseSexual assault and chase.
It was found that some of all the people aged 16 and above are likely to experience one or more of these 10.6 percent. Crime type By March 2025 in the year.
This figure is close to one in eight for women, while for men it is about 12 in 12.
Estimates mean 5.1 million people over the age of 16 in England and Wales have experienced one of the three crime types, out of which 3.2 million were women and about 2 million were men, ONS said.
In a year, there was a slightly higher estimate of 5.4 million people or 11.3 percent that suffered such crime types.
Survey measures crime experiences, with domestic abuseSexual attacks and chase are referred to as “crime types” because in some cases a criminal offense would not have occurred. The ONS stated that the data was collected as part of the Crime Survey for England and Wales, but the estimates are still in development and subject to change.
A decade has produced a joint measures to help the government to help the government monitor its ambition to hal’s violence against women and girls (VAWG).
The home office will provide more details on the use of new estimates, along with other ways to measure progress against the target, in a new cross-government Vawg strategy published later this year.

An important pledge by Labor when the party came into government in the last summer, was to reduce Vawg in the next decade.
A long-awaited strategy is expected to address the issue using “prevention in your heart with a cross-government approach”. It is autumn.
However, many MPs and campaign groups have expressed concern that enough progress is not being made to deal with the issue.
Campaign groups and charities have warned in such asylum that underfunding is threatening that the pledge is threatened, which they say that the budget announcements have been “neglected” in the budget announcements.
Earlier this month, Gama Sherington, CEO of Sharan, said: “The refuge welcomed the government’s commitment to halving Vawg within a decade, but without effective, strategic and transparent investment, this pledge is slightly higher than the lip service for women’s safety.
“Time and again, Vawg has been neglected in budget announcements – with serious consequences for important frontline services that support survivors. The government’s ambition to halve VAWG within 10 years is simply unacceptable, without meaningful investment in both prevention and survivor support.”