Study shows Panhandle Health where to improve health |
March 29, 2011 |
A study out of the
University of Wisconsin that ranks Idaho’s
counties according to factors that determine
health shows that Kootenai County residents live
long and prosper compared to much of the state
and, in particular, to residents of Shoshone
County. The report, funded by the
Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, ranks health
environments for nearly every county in the
nation. It compares counties within states, but
does not compare them to counties in other
states. In
The report aims to spur
improvements that lead to better overall health
by providing communities with a guide to where
to focus those improvements.
“Many health factors are
affected by smoking, physical activity, obesity,
diabetes, teen pregnancy and sexually
transmitted diseases,” said Lora Whalen,
Panhandle Health District director. “We all need
to be aware of how our behavior is linked to our
personal health.”
Some factors that affect
health are easier to change than others. In the
five northern counties in the Panhandle Health
District, unemployment numbers climbed anywhere
from three percent to more than five percent in
2010. The rate of adults without
health insurance also climbed since last year in
all five counties. It now ranges from 16 percent
in Panhandle counties
progressed to a small degree in health factors
that have motivated national movements over the
past few years. Obesity rates dropped
slightly in Bonner, Boundary and Benewah
counties, but increased one percentage point in
Kootenai and Shoshone counties. Smoking rates decreased
slightly in Bonner, Shoshone and Boundary
counties, although Shoshone’s 27 percent rate is
9 points higher than the state’s overall smoking
rate. The teen birth rate fell in
Boundary and Bonner counties and remained the
same in the other three counties. The motor
vehicle crash rate also dropped slightly in all
but Some factors combined to
lower rankings.
The rate of children living
in poverty ranged from a low of 15 percent in
“The county health
rankings give us a snapshot of how our five
northern counties compare to other
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