Some states do a much worse job than others of keeping their
residents healthy and providing for high-quality, affordable health care when
their residents need it. People usually
live shorter, less healthy lives in these states than they might if they lived
elsewhere.
In my last column, I described a new States for Your
Health ranking, and examined the states that finished near the top.
This week, I want to
look first at why Florida, ranked first in one of the seven indicators – per
capita Medicare spending on non-institution-based services – only finished 30th
overall.
Florida’s doesn’t invest enough in public health and
prevention. It is 36th among
the states in the 2011 Kids Count rankings, and 37th in the 2011 Healthy
State rankings. Children in poor
environments for their health are more likely to develop both physical and
mental illnesses as they age. Obesity,
cancers, heart diseases, and mental illnesses are all expensive, and can cut
decades from life expectancy.
Florida’s care quality rankings are much higher than its
prevention rankings. It is 11th
in the number of times its hospital programs made the U.S. News and World Report national rankings. These high quality programs are usually found
in just a few hospitals in major cities, but this is the case in most
states. It is 16th in nurse
practitioners per 100,000 residents, and 19th best in keeping
Medicaid nursing home and hospital spending under control.
Florida is, however, is near the bottom (45th
place) in the percentage of residents with private insurance. That hurts.
The ten lowest ranked
states either score exceptionally low in the prevention or health care
rankings, or consistently low across the board:
50. West Virginia. The lowest-ranked state isn’t at the bottom
in any individual ranking. It is just near
the bottom everywhere – 40th in the percentage of people with
private insurance, 43rd in the Healthy
State rankings, and 44th in Kids
Count. It broke into the top half in
only one ranking, the amount its Medicaid program spends on hospitals and
nursing homes. Even that may not be such
a good thing. While low Medicaid
spending on institutions was considered positive in this ranking, it is also an
indicator of low spending on health care in general.
49. Louisiana. Louisiana finished next-to-last
in both the Healthy State and Kids Count rankings. That’s why it’s 49th here,
too. On the other hand, it was 2nd
in per capita community Medicare spending, and has some quality hospital
programs. It clearly has assets on which
to build.
48. Mississippi. Mississippi is last in the Kids Count and Healthy State rankings, and next to last in percentage of people
with private insurance. However, it is in
the top ten in community-based Medicare spending and in the number of nurse
practitioners per 100,000. Both could contribute
to a healthier state in the future.
47. Oklahoma. Oklahoma is in the bottom ten
in nurse practitioners, Kids Count,
and Healthy State rankings. It is also one of 18 states with no highly
ranked hospital programs.
45t. Arkansas. Arkansas’s profile looks similar to some
of the others at the bottom. It has low
prevention ratings that bring down its overall ranking, but it is near the top
in number of nurse practitioners and limiting Medicaid hospital and nursing
home spending.
45t. Kentucky. Kentucky isn’t near to the bottom in any single
indicator. It is just consistently weak
across the board.
44. New Mexico. New Mexico is in last place in the
percentage of people privately insured.
43. Nevada. Nevada is in last place in the number of
nurse practitioners.
42. Alabama. Alabama ranks low in prevention and primary
care rankings.
41. Montana. Montana is as high as 25th in the Healthy State rankings, but it lags in Kids Count and all of the health care
rankings.
Two states finished last in individual rankings but did not
make the bottom ten. South Dakota was at the bottom in
community-based Medicare spending per capita, but ranked 29th
overall. New Jersey spent the most from its Medicaid program on hospital and
nursing home care, but still finished 9th overall.
To see the complete rankings, click here.
If there is a bottom
line, it is this. Despite our
discouragement with our public health and health care systems in general, people
in nearly every state have at least something for which to be thankful. And there will be better days ahead for all
of us if policy leaders understand that we want them to do more for our health,
not less.
Happy Thanksgiving!
Comments
Post a Comment