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2019 County Health Rankings Key Findings Report [countyhealthrankings.org]

 

By ranking the health of nearly every county in the nation, County Health Rankings & Roadmaps (CHR&R) illustrates how where we live affects how well and how long we live. CHR&R also shows what each of us can do to create healthier places to live, learn, work, and play – for everyone. This year highlights an important element that shapes how well and how long we live: secure, affordable housing.

Summary of Key Findings

  • Across the U.S., more than 1 in 10 households (11%) spend more than half of their income on housing costs (severe housing cost burden). Among those who own their home, housing cost burden has decreased in the past decade. At the same time, there has been no improvement in the rates among renters. Housing cost burden remains substantially higher among renters than owners, particularly for households with low incomes.
  • Severe housing cost burden affects health and is linked to barriers to living long and well. Across counties, increases in the share of households severely cost burdened are associated with more food insecurity, more child poverty, and more people in fair or poor health.
  • More segregated counties have higher rates of severe cost burden, for both White and Black households. However, Black residents face greater barriers to opportunity and health than White residents. Nearly 1 in 4 Black households spend more than half of their income on housing.
  • Owning a home can, over time, help build savings for education or for other opportunities important to health and future family wealth. In large urban and smaller metro counties, the vast majority of households headed by Whites own their home, while more than half of households headed by Blacks are renters, rather than homeowners. In the past decade, trends in homeownership rates have changed little on average, though gaps among racial/ethnic groups are widening.



[For more on this report, go to http://www.countyhealthranking...-key-findings-report]

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In 2000, I heard an Epidemiologist at 'Grand Rounds' note: "52% of Detroit Metropolitan Area Schoolchildren met the [then] DSM-IV criteria for PTSD." Similar numbers have subsequently been reported in Philadelphia, Baltimore, Atlanta, and in June of 2018 at five charter schools in New Orleans...  In the early 1970's, while visiting the Southeast Bronx, I learned that 85% of the housing was 'substandard' or 'deteriorated', and mortgages for property there were 'hard-to-come-by'.... Recently, I saw a more detailed housing assessment for our 'twin state area, published by our 'Upper Valley Lake Sunapee Regional Planning Commission, and it was comforting to know there are organizations of people endeavoring to address this here, and elsewhere.

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