The Congressional District Health Dashboard Can Inform
Policymaker Action to Eliminate Wide Disparities in Premature
Death, Mental Health, Childhood Poverty, Broadband Access, and
More
NEW
YORK, Jan. 25, 2023 /PRNewswire/ -- Today,
researchers at NYU Grossman School of Medicine, in partnership with
the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (RWJF), unveiled the
Congressional District Health Dashboard (CDHD), a new online tool
that provides critical health data for all 435 congressional
districts and the District of
Columbia. The dashboard incorporates 36 key measures of
health, such as deaths from cardiovascular disease and breast
cancer, along with conditions that affect health, like housing
affordability and access to nutritious foods. Until now, most of
these data were not available at the congressional district level,
nor were they compiled in a single location or easily available to
the public.

The Congressional District Health Dashboard's data reveal stark
geographic, and racial and ethnic differences in health and
wellbeing across congressional districts in the United States. For example, people living
in congressional districts in the 11 states that have not expanded
Medicaid coverage under the Affordable Care Act are twice as likely
to be uninsured compared to those in states with expanded Medicaid
coverage. In fact, residents of congressional districts in
Arkansas, Louisiana, Oklahoma, and Texas on average are almost 3.5 times more
likely to be uninsured than those in congressional districts in New
England. On average, Hispanic residents have the highest rates of
uninsurance in most congressional districts across the country.
"The Congressional District Health Dashboard will help fill a
critical need for timely, rigorous, and actionable data that can
inform evidence-based policymaking," says Marc N. Gourevitch, MD, MPH, chair of the
Department of Population Health at NYU Langone Health and the
initiative's principal architect. "Now, policymakers, advocates,
and others can drill down to their specific congressional districts
to identify the opportunities and challenges affecting the health
and wellbeing of all the people they serve, regardless of income,
race, or zip code."
The Congressional District Health Dashboard enables users
to:
- explore rigorous, non-partisan data on health, education,
poverty, and more by congressional district and compare these
findings to state and national averages;
- compare the rates of select metrics among different racial and
ethnic groups within districts;
- view any congressional district's snapshot, with all 36
measures compared to the national average, along with
district-specific population facts like age and racial/ethnic
makeup.
The CDHD's analysis of the congressional district data also
reveals:
- Across congressional districts, there is large variation in
several health outcomes including people reporting mental distress
which ranges from 9 to 21 percent by district.
- Rent burden is lowest in rural districts at 37 percent, and
highest in districts along the coastal regions (California, the northeast, and Florida) and urban congressional districts
generally, at 50 percent.
- Across the U.S., deaths from cardiovascular disease are lower
in suburban districts at 194 deaths per 100,000, compared to urban
and rural districts at 215 and 225 deaths per 100,000,
respectively.
- Child poverty is lower in suburban districts at about 14
percent, and higher in urban and rural districts at 19
percent.
- Broadband access is significantly lower in rural southern
districts, where only 40 to 50 percent of households have
high-speed internet compared to 80 to 90 percent in urban districts
with strong broadband access.
- Racial and ethnic disparities in low birth weight are observed
across districts, with particularly stark disparities in
Alabama, Florida, Louisiana, North
Carolina, and South
Carolina. In over three-quarters of the districts in these
states, Black newborns are roughly twice as likely to be
underweight at birth than White babies (with other racial/ethnic
groups falling between), including all of South Carolina's districts and five of
Louisiana's six districts.
"This dashboard could be a game-changer for health policy in
the United States. By using local
data, members of Congress and their staff can make more informed
decisions about policies affecting people's healthcare,
communities, and workplaces," said Giridhar
Mallya, MD, MSHP, senior policy officer at RWJF. "Our health
shouldn't be determined by our congressional district, but these
data clearly show how far we have to go to address persistent
inequities across the country. Regardless of who they are or where
they live, all people in the United
States deserve the opportunity to thrive."
Overseen and regularly updated by a team of population health
and policy experts, epidemiologists, and geospatial specialists,
the Congressional District Health Dashboard website displays
measures and drivers of health through interactive maps, tables,
and charts. Data are drawn from federal sources and other datasets
that adhere to rigorous standards of data collection and analysis,
including the U.S. Census Bureau, the Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention, and the Environmental Protection Agency.
About the Congressional District
Health Dashboard
A first-of-its-kind tool, the Congressional District Health
Dashboard equips congressional staff, federal and state advocates,
journalists, researchers, and others with data on health and
conditions that affect health in every congressional district
across the country, fueling constituents' and policymakers' efforts
to take action and drive change. With support from the Robert Wood
Johnson Foundation, the CDHD builds on the foundation of the City
Health Dashboard and responds to requests for additional
unbiased health and wellbeing data at the congressional district
level.
About the Robert Wood Johnson
Foundation
The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (RWJF) is committed to
improving health and health equity in the
United States. In partnership with others, we are working to
develop a Culture of Health rooted in equity that provides every
individual with a fair and just opportunity to thrive, no matter
who they are, where they live, or how much money they have. For
more information, visit www.rwjf.org.
About NYU Langone's Department of
Population Health
The Department of Population Health at NYU Langone Health unites
the fields of medicine and public health to improve the health of
populations in New York City and
around the globe, and to educate students to become leaders in
healthcare delivery, health policy, and public health. Partnering
with colleagues across diverse public, private and community
organizations, the Department conducts basic and applied research
to enhance the quality and effectiveness of healthcare and to
advance community-level initiatives to improve health and health
equity. Trained in diverse disciplines, the Department's more than
130 core faculty and 400 dedicated staff specialize in research
areas including: healthcare delivery science, health economics and
policy, epidemiology, biostatistics, medical ethics, early
childhood development, community health and health equity, decision
science, and tobacco, alcohol, and drug use prevention and
treatment. Visit us at med.nyu.edu/pophealth.
For further information, contact:
Mona Elkalban: 703-589-4305 MElkalban@burness.com
Sasha Walek: 646-501-3873, sasha.walek@nyulangone.org
Melissa Blair:
609-627-5937, media@rwjf.org
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SOURCE NYU Grossman School of Medicine and NYU Langone
Health