Health & Fitness

America’s Health Rankings 2019: Arizona Ranks No. 31

The United Health Foundation has released its annual America's Health Rankings. Find out why Arizona finished in the bottom half.

ARIZONA — The United Health Foundation recently released the 30th edition of its America’s Health Rankings Annual Report, which represents the longest-running state-by-state analysis of the nation’s health.

It’s fair-but-not-great news for Arizona in 2019, as we finished 31st healthiest overall out of the 50 states.

Here’s more information on how our state ranked across the five model categories that determined the overall ranking.

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  • Behaviors: 21
  • Community & Environment: 43
  • Policy: 45
  • Clinical Care: 29
  • Health Outcomes: 23

Arizona has remained steady in its ranking overall throughout the past 30 years.

  • 2010 Ranking: 31
  • 2000 Ranking: 29
  • 1990 Ranking: 29

The report indicates that 22.1 percent of Arizona adults were physically inactive in 2019, which means nearly 78 percent were active. Also 14 percent of Arizona adults smoked in 2019, but that meant 86 percent didn't.

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Here are some other healthy highlights from the report.

Vermont ranked as the healthiest city in America for 2019, the researchers found, followed by Massachusetts, Hawaii, Connecticut and Utah.

At the other end of the rankings, Mississippi finished as the lowest-ranked state in the nation. The bottom five was rounded out by Louisiana, Arkansas, Alabama and Oklahoma.

The report ranked all 50 states across 35 measures of health, such as e-cigarette use, housing problems and concentrated disadvantage. These measures were then filtered through the following five categories to help determine an overall ranking for each state:

  • Behaviors
  • Community & Environment
  • Policy
  • Clinical Care
  • Health Outcomes

The America’s Health Rankings Annual Report used 19 data sources to determine the most accurate information for each state, including the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Behavior Risk Surveillance System and the U.S. Census Bureau’s American Community Survey and Current Population Survey.

“The report provides a unique opportunity to track short- and long-term public health successes as well as identify current and emerging challenges at state and national levels,” authors of the United Health Foundation wrote. “When reading the report, think beyond the rankings; every state, whether first or last, has strengths and challenges.”

The full report is available on Americashealthrankings.org.

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