|
How States Rank on Health Care Wednesday, June 13, 2007
By Miranda Hitti
Hawaii leads and Oklahoma lags on a new state scorecard about health system performance.
The scorecard is the first of its kind from the Commonwealth Fund, a private foundation focused on health care.
The Commonwealth Fund rated states based on 32 indicators, including access, quality, cost, insurance, preventive care, potentially avoidable hospital visits, and premature death (death before age 75).
The top five states in order are Hawaii, Iowa, New Hampshire, Vermont, and Maine.
The bottom five states are Nevada, Arkansas, Texas, Mississippi, and Oklahoma.
Wide Range
The top-rated states scored two to three times higher than the lowest-ranked states.
"Where you live really matters in terms of your experience with the American health care system," Commonwealth Fund President Karen Davis told reporters at a news conference.
"The wide variation and gaps between leading and lagging states add up to substantial human and economic cost for the nation," says Cathy Schoen, the Commonwealth Fund's senior vice president for research and evaluation.
Schoen says that if all states equaled the top-rated states, there would be 90,000 fewer premature deaths before age 75 from conditions such as diabetes, infection, respiratory disease, and treatable cancers. In addition, 22 million more adults and children would be insured, cutting U.S. uninsured rates in half.
Room for Improvement
Every state has room for improvement -- even those leading the scorecard -- notes Schoen, who worked on the scorecard with other experts.
"Each of the top states has some indicators in the bottom half of the state distribution," Schoen says. In other words, though those states may rank highly overall, they're not acing every category in the scorecard.
Insurance tracked with the states' ratings.
"In general, states that did well in the overall rankings had the lowest rates of uninsured in the nation, and states that did poorly had the highest rates of uninsured in the nation," Schoen says.
But high ratings didn't always mean high costs.
"Indeed, some states have high quality and lower cost," Schoen says. She adds that "high costs tend to track higher rates of potentially preventable hospital use and 30-day re-admission rates, indicating a need for a focus on prevention and primary care and care coordination."
State Rankings
Here is the list of how the states and Washington, D.C., ranked overall. States with the same ranking are listed together.
1. Hawaii
2.Iowa
3. New Hampshire, Vermont
4. Maine
5. Rhode Island
6. Connecticut
7. Massachusetts
8. Wisconsin
9. South Dakota
10. Minnesota
11. Nebraska
12. North Dakota
13. Delaware
14. Pennsylvania
15. Michigan
16. Montana, Washington
17. Maryland
18. Kansas
19. Wyoming
20. Colorado, New York
21. Ohio, Utah
22. Alaska, Arizona, New Jersey
23. Virginia Idaho, North Carolina
25. Washington, D.C.
26, South Carolina
27. Oregon
28. New Mexico
29. Illinois
30. Missouri
31. Indiana
32. California
33. Tennessee
34. Alabama
35. Georgia
36. Florida
37. West Virginia
38. Kentucky
39. Louisiana, Nevada
40. Arkansas
41. Texas
42. Mississippi, Oklahoma
This article was reviewed by Louise Chang, MD.
SOURCES: The Commonwealth Fund Commission on a High-Performance Health System: "Aiming Higher: Results from a State Scorecard on Health System Performance," June 2007. Karen Davis, president, The Commonwealth Fund. Cathy Schoen, senior vice president for research and evaluation, The Commonwealth Fund.
|