Health & Fitness

Bucks Among America's Healthiest Counties In 2022: U.S. News

One of nine PA counties on the list, Bucks ranked behind Montgomery, Chester, and Cumberland, the same counties it ranked behind last year.

BUCKS COUNTY, PA — Several counties across Pennsylvania have been listed among the healthiest communities in the nation in a new study released by U.S. News & World report, with Bucks County making the list.

A total of 9 Pennsylvania counties made the country's top 500 in the fifth annual report, including two in the top 100: Montgomery at 83rd, and Chester at 95th. Bucks ranked 208th on the list.

To rank the counties, U.S. News looked at how nearly 3,000 U.S. counties performed in 89 metrics across 10 health-related categories, including an environmental category new to this year's list. The new category was included to help account for the growing threat of climate change.

Find out what's happening in Levittownfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

Other Pennsylvania counties in the ranking included:

83. Montgomery

Find out what's happening in Levittownfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

95. Chester

171. Cumberland

208. Bucks

250. Butler

382. Centre

414. Allegheny

496. Adams

497. Northampton

Last year, Bucks County ranked as the 274th healthiest American county, where it was still behind Montgomery (96), Chester (109), and Cumberland (235).

The categories are based on factors key to evaluating community health that were identified by the National Committee on Vital and Health Statistics — a policy advisory board to the head of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services — as part of its Measurement Framework for Community Health and Well-Being.

U.S. News collected data for its rankings from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the U.S. Census Bureau, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, among others.

Read more about the rankings' methodology.

Using data on natural disasters from the National Risk Index by FEMA — the Federal Emergency Management Agency — U.S. News found in this year's analysis that Indigenous people are at the greatest risk from natural hazards. They have higher risks from sustained periods of colder temperatures, droughts, flooding in rivers and streams, and wildfires compared with other racial and ethnic groups, the analysis showed.

Black people are more at risk from heat waves, hurricanes, tornadoes and coastal flooding than any other demographic group, according to the analysis, and earthquakes pose the highest risk to Native Hawaiians and other Pacific Islanders.

Tornadoes pose the highest risk to the overall population in the United States and are a particular threat to white, Black and Hispanic populations, the analysis found.

The ranking also revealed connections between top performers on the list and COVID-19 health outcomes. Communities with higher cumulative COVID-19 deaths per 100,000 people have lower rates of postsecondary education, lower life expectancy and lower shares of adults who have recently engaged in leisure-time physical activity, the analysis showed. Communities with higher vaccination rates also had lower rates of death due to COVID-19.

These are the top 10 healthiest communities in the United States, according to the ranking:

  1. Los Alamos County, New Mexico
  2. Falls Church, Virginia
  3. Douglas County, Colorado
  4. Morgan County, Utah
  5. Carver County, Minnesota
  6. Sioux County, Iowa
  7. Ozaukee County, Wisconsin
  8. Hamilton County, Indiana
  9. Broomfield County, Colorado
  10. Delaware County, Ohio

U.S. News also ranked several subgroups of communities including high-performing and up-and-coming urban communities, as well as high-performing and up-and-coming rural communities.

Other key findings in the 2022 report:

  • Four of the top 20 are in northern Virginia: No. 2 Falls Church, No. 12 Loudoun County, No. 13 Arlington County and No. 17 Fairfax County.
  • For the second year in a row, Iowa counties are most heavily represented in the top 500, with 57 counties in the state making the list after 61 made it last year. Minnesota was next with 52 counties in the top 500.
  • Rhode Island, Iowa and Minnesota were the states with the highest median overall scores across their counties, while Mississippi, Louisiana and Arkansas had the lowest median overall scores.
  • Communities with lower scores in the mental health subcategory tend to have lower life expectancies, lower median household incomes and lower labor force participation, as well as higher rates of poverty.
  • Rural communities are more likely to have higher shares of adults reporting frequent mental distress, and urban communities are more likely to have higher shares of Medicare beneficiaries diagnosed with depression.

See the full ranking for this year's top 500 healthiest communities.

Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.