Latest health rankings include wide variation in local counties
March 27, 2014 | | 3 min read
Jim McLean — KHI News Service
The Kansas side of the metropolitan area continues to be a tale of two cities, so to speak, in terms of population health.
In this year’s state-by-state county health rankings, released Wednesday, Wyandotte County continued to rank near the bottom (96th out of the 98 ranked) while neighboring Johnson County repeated its No. 1 status from a year ago.
This is the fifth year for the County Health Rankings, a collaboration of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and the University of Wisconsin Population Health Institute.
The report compares counties using 29 factors that impact health, including smoking, high school graduation rates, unemployment, physical inactivity and access to healthy foods.
Coordination of the Kansas data comes through the Kansas Health Institute.
Social determinants
The health rankings are evidence of the extent to which social and environmental factors — known as social determinants — affect health, said Gianfranco Pezzino, a physician who oversees public health research at the Kansas Health Institute.
Like the difference between Johnson and Wyandotte counties, the Missouri side of the metropolitan area reflects similar disparities. The Missouri data includes all the state’s 115 counties. Local rankings include:
-
Cass – 15
-
Clay – 12
-
Jackson – 75
-
Lafayette – 10
-
Platte – 4
In Kansas, six of the 10 counties at the bottom of the rankings are in southeast Kansas: Woodson, Elk, Chautauqua, Cherokee, Montgomery and Labette.
All of the southeast Kansas counties that rank among the bottom 10 have child poverty and unemployment rates that are significantly higher than the state average. They also generally have higher rates of people without health insurance and higher rates of teen pregnancy.
A county border
Wyandotte County also is another example of the power of social determinants, Pezzino said, as indicated by its performance relative to Johnson County. Residents of both counties have proximity to the same health care providers.
“Yet the difference (in health) couldn’t be bigger,” Pezzino said.
The reason is partially due to the fact that more residents of Wyandotte County are uninsured and therefore less able to get regular preventive care. But wide disparities in social and economic indicators are bigger reasons for the counties’ polar opposite rankings, Pezzino said.
Alarmed by their county’s low ranking in the first report released in 2009, political and public health leaders in Wyandotte County started formulating a plan to address a range of contributing social factors.
Despite the apparent lack of progress, Pezzino said people spearheading the effort in Wyandotte County shouldn’t be discouraged.
“These things really take time, at least a generation,” Pezzino said. “I’m very confident the results will come.”
Major Funding for Health coverage on KCPT provided by Assurant Employee Benefits and the Health Care Foundation of Greater Kansas City.
Reading these stories is free, but telling them is not. Start your monthly gift now to support Flatland’s community-focused reporting.
Related Stories
Caregiving Squeezes Households Between Young and Old
Melissa Johnson knows her life is hardly unique. The Oak Grove, Missouri, woman cares for her infirm 72-year-old mother, who lives in her own home nearby. She calls her mother daily. She brings dinner to her several times a week. Johnson, who coordinates care with her aunt, a team of therapists, and a nurse, is…
Feeding Tubes and Defibrillators
Let’s begin with two stories about the growing and important field of bioethics. The first is from Ryan Pferdehirt, the newly named Flanigan Chair in Bioethics at the Kansas City-based Center for Practical Bioethics. A hospital once asked him to consult on a bioethics case in which a son thought his desperately ill, hospitalized mother…
After Tuberculosis Outbreak, Wyandotte County Parts Ways with Health Director
The director of the Wyandotte County Public Health Department is no longer with the agency, a spokesperson confirmed Tuesday. It comes after turmoil during the handling of the major tuberculosis outbreak, shown by emails obtained by the Kansas News Service. Elisha Caldwell had been head of the local health department while an outbreak of TB grew…


