Αποτελέσματα Αναζήτησης
Click the "Download" button to view a full-sized PDF version of The ODH Table of Organization.
Counties are ordered by the health factor rank, with a top-ranked county (rank = 1) having the best health factor score. The chart next to the map shows the spread of health factor scores (ranks) for each ranked county (blue circles) in Ohio. This graphic shows the size of the gaps
Ohio ranks 47 on health value 47 out of 50 states and D.C. Why does Ohio rank poorly? Ohio’s healthcare spending is mostly on costly downstream care to treat health problems. This is largely because of a lack of attention and effective action in the following areas: Sparse public health workforce leads to missed opportunities for prevention
30 Απρ 2021 · In 2021, Ohio ranked 47 out of 50 states and D.C. on health value. This means that Ohioans are living less healthy lives and spending more on health care than people in most other states. Ohio ranks in the bottom quartile on 29% of ranked metrics and in the top quartile on only 12% of ranked metrics.
Where does Ohio rank? • Ohio ranks 46 out of 50 states and the District of Columbia (D.C.) on health value, landing in the bottom quartile. This means that Ohioans are less healthy and spend more on health care than people in most other states. • Ohio ranks in the bottom quartile on nearly 30 percent of metrics and in the top
The green map shows the distribution of Ohio’s health outcome ranks across counties. The map is divided into four quartiles with less color intensity indicating better health outcomes in the respective summary rankings. Specific county ranks can be found in the table on page 2.
This interactive website displays state and county-level data on topics such as demographic trends, leading causes of death, population health, healthcare spending, access to health care, public health and prevention, social and economic environment, and physical environment.