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Thursday
Nov192009

The Disparity between State Health Rankings

By Clive Riddle, November 19, 2009

How much difference is there between overall health care performance rankings of states, conducted by major organizations? I thought I’d peek into two recent studies and compare them. Interestingly, the two studies both agreed on who was first (Vermont), who was last (Mississippi), generally agreed on this highest and lowest ranking states, but agreed on little in-between.

This week, United Health Foundation, the American Public Health Association and Partnership for Prevention released the 20th Anniversary Edition of America’s Health Rankings. The full report can be downloaded, or drop-down queries can be made from www.americashealthrankings.org

Their press release states that the rankings “provide an analysis of national health on a state-by-state basis by evaluating a historical and comprehensive set of health, environmental and socio-economic data to determine national health benchmarks and state rankings. The Rankings employs a unique methodology, developed and annually reviewed by a Scientific Advisory Committee of leading public health scholars.” 21 core measures and 15 supplemental measures were used, categorized into determinants including Behaviors, Community Environment, Public and Health Policies, Clinical Care, and Outcomes.

Last month, The Commonwealth Fund released their report "Aiming Higher: Results from the 2009 State Scorecard on Health System Performance." This is a comparative follow up to their 2007 state scorecard report. The report has been released in the context of health reform, with the finding that there continues to be significant disparities between states regarding a wide number of health care measures. The Commonwealth Fund states their report "includes 38 indicators grouped into five dimensions of performance—access, prevention/treatment quality, avoidable hospital use and costs, equity, and healthy lives. The analysis ranks states on each indicator and then averages the indicator ranks to determine the dimension rank. Dimension scores determine the overall rank. Equity measures the gaps in performance between vulnerable groups and the national average."

So I compiled the overall state rankings for both reports (but I encourage you to review the individual measures in both reports- it gets more meaningful when you examine the specifics.) I indicated the absolute difference in rankings between the reports for each state (factoring out DC which was included in the Commonwealth report but not America’s Health Rankings- also it should be noted there are duplicate rankings in both reports when states tied.)

The exercise kind of reminded me of the college football ranking comparisons displayed this time of year with the BCS, AP and Harris polls.

State

Commonwealth

America's

Difference

Alabama

39

48

9

Alaska

33

34

1

Arizona

35

27

8

Arkansas

47

40

7

California

30

23

7

Colorado

24

8

16

Connecticut

8

7

1

Delaware

14

32

18

Florida

42

36

6

Georgia

36

43

7

Hawaii

2

4

2

Idaho

28

14

14

Illinois

41

29

12

Indiana

27

35

8

Iowa

2

15

13

Kansas

23

24

1

Kentucky

44

41

3

Louisiana

48

47

1

Maine

5

9

4

Maryland

17

21

4

Massachusetts

7

2

5

Michigan

20

30

10

Minnesota

4

5

1

Mississippi

50

50

0

Missouri

36

38

2

Montana

18

26

8

Nebraska

13

16

3

Nevada

46

45

1

New Hampshire

5

5

0

New Jersey

29

18

11

New Mexico

42

31

11

New York

21

25

4

North Carolina

40

37

3

North Dakota

9

17

8

Ohio

26

33

7

Oklahoma

49

49

0

Oregon

31

13

18

Pennsylvania

15

28

13

Rhode Island

11

10

1

South Carolina

32

46

14

South Dakota

12

20

8

Tennessee

38

44

6

Texas

45

39

6

Utah

19

2

17

Vermont

1

1

0

Virginia

22

22

0

Washington

16

11

5

West Virginia

34

42

8

Wisconsin

10

12

2

Wyoming

25

19

6

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