Friday, February 29, 2008

[EQ] Big Cities Health Inventory

Big Cities Health Inventory (BCHI) - The Health of Urban USA

 

US National Association of County and City Health Officials (NACCHO) Metro Forum. 2007


Available online as PDF file [150p.] at: http://www.naccho.org/topics/crosscutting/documents/BCHI07COLORFINAL.pdf

 

“…… a compendium of health status indicators produced in a comparative format for the 54 largest metropolitan areas in the United States.

Data on the health of our communities are probably more widely available at this time than at any point in the past. The Internet has become a vast repository of statistics on a variety health conditions. But less progress has been made in turning these raw data into usable information, especially for the nation's largest urban areas which face higher rates of poor health status and racial/ethnic disparities in illness and access to health care services.

 

Several key principles of public health practice depend on having reliable and current information regarding the health status of the community. The most obvious of these principles is evidence-based decision making and the core science of public health, epidemiology, is grounded in the collection and analysis of data.


Perhaps an even more fundamental principle is social justice and the recognition that eliminating health disparities is critical to improving the health of the overall population. For highly diverse urban populations, understanding the root causes of health disparities, including the synergistic interplay of social and environmental stressors that contribute to the erosion of resiliency in many of our nation's urban communities, is necessary to accomplish this goal….”

 

Content:

Introduction

Background

Selection of Indicators and Organization of the Report

Selected Analyses

Trends

Summary  
Section 1 Indicators by Gender, Ranked by City

Section 2 Indicators by Race/Ethnicity, Ranked by City

Section 3 Trends, Ranked Alphabetically by City

Section 4 City Profiles by Health Indicator

Section 5 Selected Socio-demographic Indicators, Ranked Alphabetically by City

Appendix

Technical Notes



Patrick Lenihan, PhD
Public Health Institute of Metropolitan Chicago

 

 

 

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