News

Vermont Named America's Healthiest State


 

Vermont earned the top health rating in the United States for the third year in a row, according to the 2011 edition of "America’s Health Rankings."

New England is well represented in the top five, with New Hampshire second, Connecticut third, and Massachusetts fifth. Hawaii is ranked fourth. The lowest-ranked state is Mississippi, with Louisiana 49th, Oklahoma 48th, Arkansas 47th, and Alabama 46th. Mississippi has been the 50th-ranked state for the last 10 years, and has finished among the bottom three every year since the rankings were first compiled in 1990, the report notes.

"America’s Health Rankings" is published jointly by United Health Foundation, the American Public Health Association, and Partnership for Prevention. The private, not-for-profit United Health Foundation was founded in 1999 by UnitedHealth Group, which operates UnitedHealthcare.

Note: State scores are calculated using 23 measures, including early prenatal care, poor mental health days, obesity prevalence, air pollution, and public health funding.

Source: United Health Foundation

Recommended Reading

Senate Passes Short-Term SGR Fix
MDedge Cardiology
Enrollment Up for Medicare Advantage Plans
MDedge Cardiology
CMS Prepares to Hold Medicare Payments
MDedge Cardiology
Obama Signs Short-Term SGR Fix; Doctors Still Angry
MDedge Cardiology
Texas Tort Reform: More Complaints, Lower Costs
MDedge Cardiology
At-Home Care Put to the Test Under ACA
MDedge Cardiology
e-Prescribing Survey Pinpoints Connectivity, Processing Issues
MDedge Cardiology
Federal Rules Aim to Standardize Electronic Payments
MDedge Cardiology
Health Spending Continues Historic Decline in 2010
MDedge Cardiology
Survey: U.S., Older Docs More Skeptical of Health IT
MDedge Cardiology