Dane County among Healthiest Counties in Wisconsin’s Health Rankings

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Dane County ranked 7th out of 72 counties for health outcomes, according to the annual County Health Rankings, released today by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (RWJF) and the University of Wisconsin Population Health Institute (UWPHI). Click here to see the Rankings.
 
The Rankings are an easy-to-use snapshot comparing the health of nearly every county in the nation. The local-level data allows each state to see how its counties compare on more than 30 factors that influence health including education, housing, jobs, smoking, access to healthy food, and more.
 
According to the Rankings, the five healthiest counties in Wisconsin, starting with most healthy, are Ozaukee, Kewaunee, St. Croix, Taylor and Washington. The five counties in poorest health, starting with least healthy, are Menominee, Milwaukee, Sawyer, Adams and Washburn.
 
The County Health Rankings show us that, in Dane County, our adult smoking rates are lowest in the state, and the number of young children fully immunized in our community is better than the state average. However, we rank higher on our numbers of Chlamydia cases and the number of older adults dying from falls.
 
In response to these data trends, PHMDC has recently added a Disease Intervention Specialist to our staff to increase outreach and education to lower the county’s rates of sexually transmitted infections. We also maintain active partnerships with community coalitions and EMS focusing on healthy aging and falls prevention.
 
“These are just some of the ways we use our local data to help shape our approaches and our partnerships to improve the health and well being of everyone in our community,” Janel Heinrich, Director of Public Health Madison & Dane County.
 
“Here in Dane County, our overall health ranking of 7th is good, but when we look closely at the data, we see substantial pockets of poor health conditions and outcomes for a number of our residents,” says Heinrich.  
 
“Many factors cause these conditions and outcomes, including economic instability, racism and discrimination, and unequal access to educational opportunities and health care services. Acknowledging these factors, moving past our surface ranking, and digging into the wealth of data available to us is how we will make our community healthier,” says Heinrich.
 

 
 
About the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation
For more than 40 years the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation has worked to improve health and health care. We are working with others to build a national Culture of Health enabling everyone in America to live longer, healthier lives. For more information, visit www.rwjf.org. Follow the Foundation on Twitter at www.rwjf.org/twitter or on Facebook at www.rwjf.org/facebook.
 
About the University of Wisconsin Population Health Institute
The University of Wisconsin Population Health Institute advances health and well-being for all by developing and evaluating interventions and promoting evidence-based approaches to policy and practice at the local, state, and national levels.  The Institute works across the full spectrum of factors that contribute to health. A focal point for health and health care dialogue within the University of Wisconsin-Madison and beyond, and a convener of stakeholders, the Institute promotes an exchange of expertise between those in academia and those in the policy and practice arena.  The Institute leads the work on the County Health Rankings & Roadmaps and the RWJF Culture of Health Prize. For more information, visit http://uwphi.pophealth.wisc.edu.
 
 

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