State of Georgia Rural Health Plan
prepared for
Georgia State Office of Rural Health, a Division of
The Department of Community Health September 2007
Facilitated by The Georgia Health Policy Center
Supported by the Medicare Rural Hospital Flexibility Grant Program CFDA Number 93.241
Table of Contents
Introduction ..................................................................................................................... 3 Need for a New Planning Approach............................................................................. 4 Process of developing the Plan ................................................................................... 5 A Vision for the Future of Rural Health in Georgia....................................................... 7 How to Use the Plan .................................................................................................... 9
Demographic, Education, .............................................................................................. 10 and Economic Data ....................................................................................................... 10
Education................................................................................................................... 15 Poverty and Income................................................................................................... 16 Health Insurance Status ............................................................................................ 17 Root Causes of Poor Health ...................................................................................... 19 Disease Morbidity and Mortality in Rural Georgia...................................................... 19
Cardiovascular Disease ......................................................................................... 20 Obesity................................................................................................................... 22 Diabetes................................................................................................................. 24 Infant Mortality........................................................................................................ 27 Cancer ................................................................................................................... 29 Health Professional Supply........................................................................................ 31 Workforce Trends................................................................................................... 31 Rural Physician Supply .......................................................................................... 31 Medically Underserved Areas ................................................................................ 32 Rural Health Resources ................................................................................................ 36 Primary Care Office................................................................................................ 39 J-1 Visa Physicians ................................................................................................ 40 National Health Service Corps ............................................................................... 42 Public and Private Institutions of Higher Learning ..................................................... 45 Delivery of Primary Care............................................................................................ 45 Federally Qualified Health Centers ........................................................................ 46 Rural Health Clinics................................................................................................ 48 Georgia Farmworker Health Program .................................................................... 49 Georgia Volunteer Health Care Program ............................................................... 50 Rural Hospital Resources .......................................................................................... 51 Critical Access Hospitals........................................................................................ 51 Small Rural Hospital Improvement Program .......................................................... 52 Rural Hospital FLEX Program ................................................................................ 53 Hospital Supply and Utilization .................................................................................. 53 Network Resources ................................................................................................... 54 Networks for Rural Health ...................................................................................... 55 Additional Resources................................................................................................. 57
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Programs for the Elderly ........................................................................................ 57 Public Health .......................................................................................................... 57 Telemedicine.......................................................................................................... 59 Emergency Medical Services ................................................................................. 60 Trauma Care .......................................................................................................... 61 Plan for Improvement .................................................................................................... 63 Goal 1: ....................................................................................................................... 65 Goal 2: ....................................................................................................................... 76 Goal 3: ....................................................................................................................... 84 Goal 4: ....................................................................................................................... 90 Appendices ................................................................................................................... 99 Appendix A - Planning Committee2007 GEORGIA RURAL HEALTH PLAN........... 100 2007 GEORGIA RURAL HEALTH PLAN ................................................................ 101 PLANNING COMMITTEE........................................................................................ 101 Appendix B - Resources .......................................................................................... 102 Health Facilities In Georgia's Rural Counties ....................................................... 117 Appendix C - County Level Health and Demographic Data ..................................... 126 Demographic Characteristics of Georgia's Rural Counties .................................. 182 Mortality Data ....................................................................................................... 190 Morbidity Rates .................................................................................................... 195 Appendix D - Maps .................................................................................................. 201
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Introduction
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Introduction
The largest state east of the Mississippi River, Georgia is a land of great geographic diversity. Its rural communities are spread across five major geographic regions: the Blue Ridge Mountains in the northeast, the Ridge and Valley Province and the Cumberland Plateau in the northwest, the Piedmont across Georgia's center, and the Coastal Plain in the south.
Georgia's 110 rural counties are those with a population of 35,000 or less and those defined as rural by both state and federal legislation, as used by the State Office of Rural Health. Throughout these regions, the story of rural health has been one of high rates of death and disease, along with persistent poverty, low literacy, and inadequate health care services. Rural communities bear a greater burden of cardiovascular disease, cancer, diabetes, obesity, and infant conditions than their urban counterparts. They also have higher rates of uninsured and fewer physicians per 100,000 residents. These pressing needs, compounded by an ever shrinking pool of financial resources, pose formidable challenges for rural health planning. In response, the State Office of Rural Health embarked on an innovative planning process intended to improve rural health by focusing on community-based transformation.
Need for a New Planning Approach
A multitude of complex factors impact rural health in Georgia, including the broader health system, regulatory changes, the state's public health system, public financing system changes, and the economic health of rural communities. These financial, regulatory and systemic pressures have grown in intensity over the past decade and have created significant dilemmas for health planners. Recent planning processes and their resulting documents primarily focused on specific aspects of rural health care such as hospitals or physicians' services, Federally Qualified Health Centers or Health Information Technology. Typically, they addressed the needs of one community or one region or a selected disease or health problem.
These past efforts have had a significant positive impact on the health of rural Georgians and have established a solid foundation of information and capacity for planning at the community level. In 2005, as staff of the State Office of Rural Health began the task of statewide rural health planning, they became committed to a process of inclusion in the development of the 2007 Georgia Rural Health Plan. They wanted a process that would encourage and enhance collaboration among Georgia's health care stakeholders and produce a plan that all parties could support. Faced with limited financial resources for rural health, they embraced the need for a plan that would provide direction and be a resource for community-based health improvements.
Of utmost importance to the State office of Rural Health was the need for:
A context in which all of the important conversations could take place. Several health-related planning efforts had been recently completed or were concurrently underway. Some were national population health frameworks such as Healthy People 2010 and the accompanying Rural Healthy People 2010 developed by
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the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Institute of Medicine's report on rural health, "Quality through Collaboration." Other initiatives were state focused, such as the Georgia Division of Public Health's seven areas of emphasis
A process to give voice to the variety of institutions, organizations, and individuals interested in improving the health of rural Georgians, recognizing that the wisdom necessary for success is in all of the people in the system not just those who represent the top or any one stakeholder group
A plan that would be supported by all stakeholders. Because rural health planning in Georgia had traditionally been narrowly focused, the expertise of broad groups of community stakeholders had not been fully tapped. By engaging the collective experiences of those closest to the "front line," the plan would reflect invaluable contributions of community stakeholders most knowledgeable about the issues, their implications, and effective strategies
A strategy that would consider the whole system rather than concentrate on fragmented parts of the system and focus on local solutions with support from the state and national levels
In short, the bottom line was to produce not only a rural health plan, but also to engage those who live in and support rural Georgia in the process of creating the direction for change.
Process of developing the Plan
The State Office of Rural Health is part of the Georgia Department of Community Health. The Georgia Department of Community Health is the state agency which provides health care to more than two million Georgia residents under the Medicaid and PeachCare for KidsTM programs and the State Health Benefit Plan. The Georgia Department of Community Health champions:
ACCESS to affordable, quality health care in our communities RESPONSIBLE health planning and use of health care resources HEALTHY behaviors and improved health outcomes
The approach endorsed by the State Office of Rural Health was highly dependent on providing a forum that would allow a variety of stakeholders to be heard and engaged in the plan development process. Consequently, the planning process became one of identifying those individuals, convening them, and facilitating meetings that enabled them to have conversations, share information, and reach decisions.
A broad range of stakeholders including state and local government, public health, hospital administrators, physicians, nurses, mental health, oral health, health-related associations, rural health networks, the Live Healthy Georgia program, the Area Health Education Centers, and academia participated in a series of four meetings over an 18month process that has resulted in the 2007 Georgia Rural Health Plan. Over 30
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individuals provided their insights and guidance in the creation of this plan (see Appendix A). Two key decisions by these stakeholders set the overall direction of the 2007 Georgia Rural Health Plan. First, recognizing that all change is made at the community level, this group of stakeholders called for a plan that would set the overall vision and establish goals that could be implemented by communities. At the same time, they wanted the plan to serve as a resource or toolkit that would provide data and information that communities could use in implementing change and undertaking new initiatives. Second, they saw the need to narrow the scope of the plan to the areas that would have the most impact on improving the health of rural Georgians. Thus, they chose to focus on five disease areas: cardiovascular disease, cancer, diabetes, obesity, and infant mortality. The State Office of Rural Health has reaped rich rewards from the process used to develop the 2007 Georgia Rural Health Plan. The stakeholders who participated in the process experienced the power of collaborative planningand were positively affected by it.
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A Vision for the Future of Rural Health in Georgia
The stakeholders' planning process resulted in a succinct vision for rural health in Georgia, which was adopted by the State Office of Rural Health and its partners:
"Communities working collaboratively to improve the health of rural Georgians"
A set of four goals and their related areas of concentration set the vision for rural health within the broader framework of other initiatives addressing health and well-being.
Goal 1: Build a system of care that is unified, clinically relevant, financially viable and responsive to community needs
Priority Action 1. a: Promote the appropriate distribution of health care facilities, workforce and comprehensive services by creating an inventory of existing health care service delivery options for rural communities with periodic reviews and dissemination
Priority Action 1. b: Increase the appropriate utilization of health services by creating and promoting the use of local databases of resources across the continuum of care
Priority Action 1. c: Increase the efficiency of rural health care systems through the development and integration of multi-county health plans that are inclusive across the continuum of care utilizing local collaboratives and provide accompanying external, objective technical support
Goal 2: Promote health and wellness in all aspects of daily living
Priority Action 2. a: Increase healthy behaviors related to nutrition and physical activity among children and adolescents by working with educational systems, other governmental entities, private and grassroots community groups and families to promote healthy lifestyles
Priority Action 2 .b: Promote partnerships among community based groups to create solutions to improve healthy behaviors related to obesity, diabetes, cardiovascular disease, cancer, and infant health through the development of multi-county programs
Priority Action 2. c: Decrease infant mortality and low-birth weight by promoting pre-and post-natal care
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Goal 3: Support practical integration of technology to increase the efficiency and effectiveness of health services Priority Action 3. a: Improve clinical outcomes by encouraging local communities to develop long-term plans based on the Georgia Health Information Technology and Transparency Advisory Board's standards for expanding and maintaining the use of health information technology Priority Action 3. b: Increase utilization of telemedicine by educating providers and supporting communities in expanding connectivity and other health information technology infrastructure
Goal 4: Engage and enable communities in action Priority Action 4. a: Facilitate the creation and expansion of multi-county health collaborations in rural communities and provide external, objective technical support to those communities to improve health outcomes Priority Action 4. b: Improve collaborative, community-based health planning (using relevant health data) that is an integral part of local and/or regional economic development plans
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How to Use the Plan
The Georgia Rural Health Plan presents background data and priority actions, best practices, and key resources for achieving the vision and goals. It is intended to be a template for community and state agencies to use in pursuing programs and policies for rural health. Ultimately, it should be used as a toolkit to guide communities in translating well-conceptualized and documented plans into tangible action, building on their expert knowledge of local needs, priorities, and resources. This plan includes the following sections:
Demographic, Education, and Economic Data, which includes key health indicators and comparisons of rural and urban Georgia
Rural Health Resources, which outlines the array of resources to address the health needs of rural Georgians
Plan for Improvement, which presents the Goals and Priority Actions with state and national examples of best practices and community projects exemplary of successful initiatives that can be adapted to achieve the Goals of the Rural Health Plan
Appendices, which include Georgia county-by-county data and additional resources for community health improvement
The Plan provides inspiration for making rural health systems stronger and rural lifestyles healthier: By creating the will engaging the community, building enthusiasm around change,
getting all parties on the same page, coalescing around common problems Facilitating the way a planning process that actively engages and invests
community stakeholders in joint decision making and systems change Supporting communities throughout Georgia to produce the what a vision, goals,
and actions for effective programs
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Demographic, Education, and Economic Data
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Demographic, Education and Economic Data
Rural Georgians are older, poorer, and sicker than their urban counterparts, which makes rural health critically important to the state's overall health. Many more Georgians live in urban areas (70 percent) than in rural areas (30 percent). Although the state's smaller rural population masks its social circumstance, the conditions in rural areas significantly affect the state's overall productivity, health, and health care costs. The health status maps on the following pages depict the relationships among counties along the dimensions of disease prevalence, self-reported health status, and health behaviors.1 The data underlying the maps are in relation to the rest of the nation, so Georgia's transition to a darker shade of green or poorer health status in 2006 may be due to worsening health in Georgia or to greater health status gains made in other states, or both. As the maps show, residents in rural counties tend to have poorer overall health status than in urban counties. An examination of root causes and demographic differences between Georgia's rural and urban populations may reveal clues to differences in health status.
1 The Maps represent a composite score of (1) self-reported presence of disease e.g. diabetes, cancer; (2) selfreported perception of health; and (3) self-reported health behaviors e.g. smoking, exercise, and nutrition.
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Health Status by County, Georgia, 2003
Dade Catoosa
Murray
Whitfield
Walker
Chattooga
Gordon
Fannin
Towns Union
Rabun
Gilmer
White
Pickens
Lumpkin
Habersham Stephens
Dawson
Hall
Banks Franklin
Floyd
Bartow Cherokee Forsyth
Hart
Jackson Madison Elbert
Health Status Excellent 76-100 Good 53-75 Fair 37-52 Poor 0-36
Georgia Health Status Score: 54.7
Polk Haralson
Cobb Paulding
Gwinnett
DeKalb
Douglas Fulton
Rockdale
Barrow Walton
Clarke Oglethorpe
Oconee
Wilkes
Carroll
Clayton
Newton Morgan Greene Taliaferro
Lincoln Columbia
Heard
Henry
Fayette Coweta
Spalding
Butts
Jasper
Putnam Hancock
McDuffie
Warren
Richmond
Glascock
Troup
Pike Meriwether
Lamar Monroe
Jones
Baldwin
Jefferson Washington
Burke
Harris
Upson Talbot
Bibb Crawford
Wilkinson Twiggs
Johnson
Jenkins Screven
Muscogee Marion Chattahoochee
Taylor
Peach Houston
Macon
Bleckley
Laurens
Emanuel
Treutlen
Candler
Bulloch
Effingham
Schley Stewart Webster Sumter
Quitman
Randolph Terrell
Lee
Dooly Pulaski
Crisp
Wilcox
Dodge
Montgomery
Wheeler
Toombs
Evans
Telfair
Tattnall
Bryan
Turner
Ben Hill
Jeff Davis Appling
Liberty Long
Chatham
Clay Calhoun Dougherty
Early
Baker
Miller
Mitchell
Worth
Irwin Tift
Coffee
Colquitt
Berrien Cook
Atkinson
Bacon
Wayne
Pierce
Ware
Brantley
McIntosh Glynn
Seminole Decatur
Grady Thomas
Brooks
Lanier
Clinch
Lowndes
Echols
Charlton
Camden
Prepared by: G.E. Alan Dever, Ph.D., M.T., M.D. (Hon.) & Leah Smith, M.P.H. Mercer University- Health Sciences Center
Data Source: Inforum, 2004
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Age Georgia is aging at a greater rate than the United States as a whole. Currently, Georgia is a "young" state in that its population aged 64 and older is relatively small. According to calculations by the U.S. Census Bureau, the elderly population (i.e. 65 and older) in Georgia will increase by 143 percent between 2000 and 2030 versus a total population increase in Georgia of 46.8 percent.2 This compares to a national average elderly population growth of 104.2 percent. In fact, Georgia is among the top ten states expected to have a larger than average growth in elderly population over the forecast period 2000 through 2030. In absolute terms, Georgia will move from ranking 49th in concentration of population aged 65 or older to 47th among all U.S. states by 2030 - still a relatively young state, but older than it is currently.3
Rural Georgians are considerably older than their urban counterparts. Almost 11 percent of rural residents are 65 years or older, while only nine percent of urban residents are elderly.
Georgia Population Age 65 and Older
12% 10%
8% 6% 4% 2% 0%
9% Georgia
11% Rural
9% Urban
Source: U.S. Census 2005 American Community Survey
2 U.S. Census Bureau, Population Division, Interim State Population Projections, 2005. 3 Georgia Health Policy Center and Fiscal Research Center, "Georgia's Aging Population What to Expect and How to Cope", 2005.
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Education
Rural Georgians are less likely than their urban counterparts to complete high school, as seen in the chart below. They are also less likely to have completed a bachelor's degree.
Education Attainment 2005
100% 80% 60% 40% 20% 0%
83%
78%
85%
27%
32%
17%
Georgia
Rural
Urban
High School Degree Bachelor's Degree
Source: U.S. Census 2005 American Community Survey
The 2006 United Health Foundation State Health Rankings places Georgia at 49th in on-time graduation rates. In fact, according to the U.S. Census Bureau's 2005 American Community Survey, 24 percent of all Georgians and 26 percent of rural Georgians by age 24 do not have a high school diploma.
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Poverty and Income
Residents living in poverty encompass 12 percent of Georgia's urban population and 16 percent of Georgia's rural population. This compares with 14 percent statewide and 13 percent nationally.
Georgia Residents Living in Poverty 2004
18%
16%
16%
14%
14%
13% 12%
12%
10%
8%
6%
4%
2%
0%
Georgia
Rural
Urban
U.S
Source: 2004 U.S. Census Bureau, Data Integration Division, Small Area Estimates Branch
Similar to the poverty levels above, rural Georgians also lag behind in median household income.
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Median Household Income 2005
$46,500 $46,000 $45,500 $45,000 $44,500 $44,000 $43,500 $43,000
$45,604 Georgia
$44,291 Rural
$46,156 Urban
Source: U.S. Census 2005 American Community Survey Those working in white-collar jobs are more likely to have higher incomes and, thus, experience better health than those working in blue-collar jobs. The percentage of those working in white-collar jobs is much lower in rural Georgia, 47 percent, than in urban Georgia, 62 percent.
Percent White-Collar Jobs Georgia, 2000
70.0%
60.0% 50.0%
40.0%
30.0%
20.0% 10.0%
0.0%
State
Urban
Rural
Source: 2005 Area Resource File Data
Health Insurance Status
According to 2006 March Current Population Survey figures, 21 percent, or 1.7 million non-elderly Georgians, lack health insurance. Between 2000 and 2005, Georgia
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experienced a 50 percent increase in its uninsured population, up from approximately 1.1 million Georgians.
Change in Georgia Non-elderly Uninsured Rate
25% 20% 15% 10%
5% 0% 2000/20012001/20022002/20032003/20042004/2005
Georgia U.S.
Source: Custer and Ketsche, Georgia State University, 2006
Three factors appear to be driving the rapid increase in uninsured Georgians. First, more firms with less than 100 workers are choosing not to offer health insurance because of the escalating cost of providing coverage. According to a 2003 survey by the Georgia Health Policy Center, health insurance status is directly related to income and firm size. The data show that workers in small firms are less likely to be offered employer sponsored health insurance and less likely to participate in a health insurance plan when it is offered due to cost. Small firms dominate rural Georgia, so it follows workers in rural Georgia are more likely to be uninsured.
Second, there has been a three-fold increase in uninsured non-citizens living in Georgia. In fact, 50 percent of non-citizens living in Georgia are uninsured, and noncitizens make up 20 percent of the total uninsured population. Rural Georgia may be disproportionately impacted by the rise in non-citizen uninsured, particularly in counties that experienced rapid growth in immigrant populations in recent years.
Finally, more Georgians between the ages of 18 and 24 are uninsured relative to other age groups. Because rural Georgia is, on average, older than urban Georgia, rural Georgia is not impacted as greatly by the rise in younger uninsured; however, the aging population presents different health care challenges.
Individuals without health insurance lag behind the insured population on many dimensions. They are:
More likely to report fair or poor health; Less likely to receive preventive care; More likely to miss school or work;
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Less likely to have a usual source of care; Sicker when they are admitted to the hospital; and More likely to be readmitted for same illness.
Root Causes of Poor Health
A population's achievement of good health is determined by the degree to which it can access the basic elements for health and the degree to which it is exposed to harmful inputs. If social factors are at the root of observed health disparities, as many researchers have shown, then they might differentially affect a populations' access to the services and other factors that contribute to good health and harmful exposures.
It is established in the research literature that socioeconomic status affects health. Socioeconomic status is usually seen as a function of financial capacity (income and wealth), occupation, education, and social status. It is now widely accepted that the factors that have the greatest effect on people's health are beyond the control of the health sector. Income, housing, education and employment are factors that play a major role in the poor health people experience during their lifetimes.4
As one moves up the socioeconomic ladder, health tends to improve. Health disparities across race/ethnicity are also widely examined in the literature, with the general conclusion access to appropriate health care by different racial and ethnic groups affects health outcomes both directly and through its influence on socioeconomic status. Increasing access to health care (often measured by insurance and usual source of care) is held by many to be an important step to reducing health disparities.
Disease Morbidity and Mortality in Rural Georgia
Rural Georgians suffer from the same diseases as other Georgians and the United States as a whole, but those living in rural areas, perhaps due to the root causes of poor health; tend to suffer higher rates of morbidity (illness) and mortality (death) than the rest of the state. This section explores the five conditions targeted by the Rural Health Plan stakeholder group: cardiovascular disease, obesity, diabetes, infant mortality, and cancer.
A review of hospital utilization data highlights rural challenges. A greater proportion of rural Georgians is admitted to the hospital, a greater proportion is admitted for Ambulatory Care Sensitive Conditions (ACSC),5 and a higher proportion is admitted to the emergency room all possible indications of a lack of accessible primary care in rural areas. Alternatively, the statistics could be reflective of a population with more complex conditions due to age or poor health.
4 A Guide to Health Impact Assessment: A Policy Tool for New Zealand, 2004. 5 ACSC conditions are those that should not have resulted in an inpatient admission if appropriate primary care had been received.
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Hospital Utilization by Urban Rural Status
Inpatient Admissions per 1,000 Population Percent ACSC of Total Admissions Emergency Room Visits per Capita
State 117
14.5% .33
Urban 112
13.5% .32
Rural 137
17.7% .39
Source: Georgia Hospital Discharge Data, 2003
Cardiovascular Disease
Rural Georgians suffer significantly more from heart disease than their urban counterparts, and all Georgians experience more heart disease than the United States as a whole.
2004 Cardiovascular Disease Morbidity Rates per 100,000
2000 1800 1600 1400 1200 1000
800 600 400 200
0
1277 Georgia
1732 Rural
1170 Urban
Source: February 2006 Georgia Department of Human Resources, Division of Public Health, Office of Health Information and Policy
Cardiovascular disease ranks first among causes of death in both rural and urban Georgia and in the United States. The U.S. death rate due to cardiovascular disease was 232 cases per 100,000 in 2004. The age adjusted mortality rate for all Georgians was 326, while it was 313 for urban Georgians and 370 for rural Georgians.
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2004 Age-Adjusted Cardiovascular Disease Mortality Rates per 100,000
380
370
360
350
340
330
326
320
310
300
290
280
Georgia
370 Rural
313 Urban
Source: February 2006 Georgia Department of Human Resources, Division of Public Health, Office of Health Information and Policy
The good news is that cardiovascular disease mortality has trended downward over ten years, but rural Georgia continues to lag behind the rest of the state.
Age-Adjusted Cardiovascular Disease Mortality Rates per 100,000: 1994 2004
500 450 400 350 300 250 200 150 100
50 0
1994
1999
2004
Georgia Rural Urban
Source: February 2006 Georgia Department of Human Resources, Division of Public Health, Office of Health Information and Policy
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Obesity According to Jackson, et al (2005),6 more rural Georgians are obese than urban Georgians, and more Black Georgians are obese than are White Georgians. The gap between Black and White is the same in urban and rural areas. Thus, both rural/urban status and race impact obesity. The obesity crisis in Georgia is particularly critical because the state has both one of the highest prevalence rates and the fastest growth rates of obesity in the United States. According to Georgia's Nutrition and Physical Activity Plan,7 overweight among young children ages 2 to <5 years has increased 60 percent over the past decade. The Georgia Pediatric Nutrition Surveillance System1 (2002) found that 26 percent of children enrolled in the Women, Infants, and Children (WIC) Program were at risk for overweight (14 percent) or were overweight (12 percent). Hispanic WIC children were more likely to be at risk or overweight than any other race or ethnic group. The Georgia Student Health Survey (2003)8 indicates that one in three (33 percent) of middle school students aged 11through14 years and more than one in four (26 percent) high school students aged 14 through18 years are overweight or at increased risk for overweight. Middle school males (36 percent) are more likely to be at risk for overweight than middle school females (30 percent). High school males (30 percent) are more likely to be at risk for overweight than high school females (22 percent). Black students are more likely to be at risk or overweight than White students. Notably, the prevalence of at risk or overweight for White females is about half that of other race-, sex- groups.
6 Jackson, E., Doescher, M., Ferant, A., and Hart., J., "A National Study of Obesity Trends by Type of Rural County." The Journal of Rural Health: 21(2), Spring 2005. 7 Georgia Department of Human Resources, Division of Public Health. Georgia's Nutrition and Physical Activity Plan to Prevent and Control Obesity and Chronic Diseases in Georgia, July 2005. Publication Number: DPH05/048HW. 8 Kanny D, Powell KE. 2003 Georgia Student Health Survey Report. Georgia Department of Human Resources, Division of Public Health, November 2003. Publication Number: DPH03/144.
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Prevalence of at Risk for Overweight and Overweight among Students by School Type, Race, and Sex, Georgia, 2003 At risk for Overweight Overweight
50
Percent
40
17
30
19
15
20
7 10
24
20
20
12
0 White females Black females White males Middle School
Black males
10
13
19
4
23
16
14
10
White females Black females White males Black males High School
Overweight and obese adults are at increased health risk for cardiovascular disease, diabetes, stroke, hypertension, gallbladder disease, osteoarthritis and certain cancers. In 2002, 59 percent of adults in Georgia were overweight or obese with 35 percent being overweight (having a body mass index (BMI) of 25 to 29.9) and 24 percent obese (having a BMI of 30 or more).9 The percent of adults who are overweight or obese has been increasing since the Georgia Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System data were first collected in 1984, rising from 37 percent in 1984 to 61 percent in 2003. This represents an average relative increase of three percent per year. In 2002, almost twothirds of adult men (65 percent) and more than half of adult women (53 percent) were overweight or obese.
White, non-Hispanic adults (21 percent) were less likely than Black, non-Hispanic adults to be obese (31 percent). Hispanic males were more likely to be overweight or obese than males or females of any race or ethnicity. Black non-Hispanic females were more likely to be obese than White females and Black non-Hispanic males were more likely to be obese than males of any race or ethnicity. White non-Hispanic females were least likely than males or females of any race or ethnicity to be overweight or obese. Adults between 45 through 64 years of age were most likely than any other age group to be overweight or obese.
College graduates were less likely than adults with less than a high school education to be overweight or obese. Adults with a higher household income were less likely than adults with a lower income to be overweight or obese.
9 Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System: Atlanta, GA. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
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Percent of Adults in Georgia who are Overweight or Obese (BMI>24.9) by Sex, 1984-2002 Source: Georgia Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System
Male
Female
80
70
60
50
Percent
40
30
20
10
0 1983
1985
1987
1989
1991
1993 Year
1995
1997
1999
2001
2003
Diabetes
Georgia and the rest of the nation have experienced a dramatic rise in rates of diabetes, which may be related to the rise in obesity. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance Survey, the number of new diagnoses (incidence) of diabetes nationally in the past year increased from seven new cases per 100,000 to 7.3 new cases, while the Georgia rate grew from 7.3 to 8.3 cases. This implies that Georgia is challenged with an accelerated growth of the disease.
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Diabetes Incidence in Georgia: 2004 and 2005
9
8
8
7.3
7
7
7
6 U.S.
8.3 7
Georgia
2004 2005
Source: February 2006 Georgia Department of Human Resources, Division of Public Health, Office of Health Information and Policy
A closer examination of diabetes morbidity reveals that, in Georgia, not only do rates vary by rural/urban status, but also by race. Black rural and Black urban rates are both higher than either White rural or urban rates. Black rural diabetes morbidity rates are the highest.
Diabetes Morbidity: Race and Rural/Urban Status
350 300 250 200 150 100
50 0 1999
2002
2004
Rural White Rural Black Urban White Urban Black
Source: February 2006 Georgia Department of Human Resources, Division of Public Health, Office of Health Information and Policy
Unlike the positive trend observed previously with the reduction of cardiovascular disease deaths, age adjusted deaths from diabetes in rural Georgia have been on the rise since 1994. Because Georgia's urban areas and the state as a whole curbed the rise in 1999, diabetes may be viewed today as a particularly rural challenge.
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Age-Adjusted Diabetes Mortality Rates per 100,000: 1994 2004
30 25 20 15 10
5 0
1994
1999
2004
Georgia Rural Urban
Source: February 2006 Georgia Department of Human Resources, Division of Public Health, Office of Health Information and Policy
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Infant Mortality
Infant mortality rates are important indicators of a society's overall health because they reflect basic care and health care infrastructure for one of the state's most vulnerable populations. The national infant mortality rate in 2004 was 6.8 deaths per 1,000 live births. Georgia's rate, at 8.5, is somewhat higher than the national rate, and the rural Georgia infant mortality rate, 9.7, is even higher than the state rate. Infant mortality rates over the past 10 years decreased, but rates that declined to a low point in 1999 increased through 2004.
Infant Mortality Rates per 1,000: 1994 2004
14 12 10
8 6 4 2 0
1994
1999
2004
Georgia Rural Urban
Source: February 2006 Georgia Department of Human Resources, Division of Public Health, Office of Health Information and Policy
Georgia's progress in infant mortality rates over time and the narrow variation between rural and urban areas masks the disparity that exists between Blacks and Whites, as seen in the chart below. Black infant mortality rates have remained almost double that of whites over 10 years.
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Infant Mortality Rates: Race and Rural/Urban Status
18 16 14 12 10
8 6 4 2 0
1999
2002
2004
Rural White Rural Black Urban White Urban Black
Source: February 2006 Georgia Department of Human Resources, Division of Public Health, Office of Health Information and Policy
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Cancer
Cancer morbidity of all types fell from 1999 to 2004. The trend is evident at the state level and in urban and rural regions. Rural Georgia, however, still exceeds the rates of urban areas and the state as a whole.
Cancer Morbidity Rates per 100,000: 1999 2004
350 300 250 200 150 100
50 0 Georgia
Rural 1999 2004
Urban
Source: February 2006 Georgia Department of Human Resources, Division of Public Health, Office of Health Information and Policy
Overall, Georgians experience more cancer deaths than the rest of the nation. Georgia's rural age adjusted cancer mortality rate 210.4 exceeds the state's overall rate of 196.1, and they both exceed the national rate of 190.1. As with diabetes, rural mortality rates fell through 1999 and then increased, while urban areas and the state's rate continued to fall.
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Age-Adjusted Cancer Mortality Rates per 1,000,000: 1994 2004
225 220 215 210 205 200 195 190 185 180 175
1994
1999
2004
Georgia Rural Urban
Source: February 2006 Georgia Department of Human Resources, Division of Public Health, Office of Health Information and Policy
As seen in the chart below, Black cancer deaths are disproportionately represented in both rural and urban areas, perhaps serving as a sentinel indicator to community initiatives aimed at reducing cancer mortality.
Age-Adjusted Cancer Mortality: Race and Rural/Urban Status
300 250 200 150 100
50 0 1999
2002
2004
Rural White Rural Black Urban White Urban Black
Source: February 2006 Georgia Department of Human Resources, Division of Public Health, Office of Health Information and Policy
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Health Professional Supply
In 2006, Georgia's supply of physicians improved, but its rate of physicians per population remains in the bottom third of states in the United States. The distribution of primary care specialties, especially those other than family practice physicians, remains skewed toward urban areas. In rural Georgia, community-level initiatives to improve health and increase access to care thrive. Rural health partners are making progress through diligence and collaboration, and the continuation of their efforts is essential to further improvement.
Workforce Trends10
The state appears to have an overall shortage of physicians, nurses, and dentists. Additionally, the distribution of these medical professionals leaves many rural areas with even greater shortages. Georgia's Board for Physicians Workforce is charged with addressing physician supply and has produced several reports documenting the problem and offering solutions.
Georgia's physician supply is not keeping pace with the state's rapidly growing population. A statewide shortage of specialty physicians is becoming evident. Despite the fact the state has four medical schools; Georgia is heavily dependent on other states to train its physicians. About 70 percent of the state's practicing physicians completed their training in another state, and the number of applicants to the state's medical schools has declined over the past five years. Growing concern over rising physician malpractice insurance premiums has raised new fears that many physicians will curtail or close their practices.
The Georgia Board for Physician Workforce reported the following geographic distribution of physicians.
Rural Physician Supply
Designation
2004 Population
Number Of Family Practice
Primary Care Physicians
Number Of Internal Medicine
Primary Care Physicians
Number Of Pediatrics Primary Care Physicians
Number Of OBGYN
Physicians
Number Of General Surgery
Physicians
Total Of All Specialty Physicians
Rural
1,722,836
500
268
117
99
79
1,589
Urban
6,961,879
1,793
2,384
1,471
1,072
654
15,924
Georgia
8,684,715
2,293
2,652
1,588
1,171
733
17,513
In 2001, in response to the state's inadequate supply of nurses and other non-physician health professionals, the legislature created a standing policy committee to address the shortages. The Health Care Workforce Policy Advisory Committee was charged with monitoring and addressing ongoing workforce supply and demand issues in four areas:
10 Source: http://bhpr.hrsa.gov/healthworkforce/reports/states04/GEORGIA.htm
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education programming and financing; data and forecasting; work environment and enhanced productivity; and recruitment and marketing. Shortages of nurses and allied health personnel, particularly in hospitals, have not dissipated. Georgia's nursing shortage is one of the worst in the country. Although the state's changing demand for, and supply of, nurses is becoming better understood, there is a consensus that the nursing shortage in Georgia, like elsewhere, is largely associated with an insufficient capacity of nurse training programs (e.g., shortages of faculty, space and other resources to educate more nurses). Increasing numbers of qualified applicants are turned away from nursing schools. In addition, recent surveys of licensed nurses in the state indicated that almost 45 percent of registered nurses expect to work less than another 10 years. Although Georgia may face an overall shortage of dentists in the near future, oral health experts agree that the state's current dental workforce shortage is largely a distribution problem, particularly in rural areas. Additionally, according to recent surveys of practicing dentists, more than 45 percent indicate they plan to retire within 10 years.
Medically Underserved Areas
The Shortage Designation Branch in the Health Resources and Services Administration Bureau of Health Professions National Center for Health Workforce Analysis develops shortage designation criteria and uses them to decide whether a geographic area or population group is a Medically Underserved Area, a Medically Underserved Population or a Health Professional Shortage Area.
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Medically Underserved Areas and Populations have shortages of primary medical care, dental, or mental health providers and may be geographic (a county or service area) or demographic (low income, Medicaid-eligible populations, cultural and/or linguistic access barriers to primary medical care services). They are each assigned an Index of Medical Underservice score, which is used to determine the eligibility of an area or population for Medically Underserved Areas/Populations status.
A Health Professional Shortage Area is a federal designation sought by communities that suspect they have a shortage of health professionals. Health Professional Shortage Area designation is a prerequisite for participating in a variety of state and federal funding programs designed to increase access to services, in particular National Health Service Corps placements. These programs represent the federal government's attempt to address the distribution, and to a lesser extent, the diversity, of health professionals.
The first map below shows Georgia's Primary Health Professional Shortage Areas. Of the 85 Health Professional Shortage Areas in Georgia, 66 are located in rural counties. The second map illustrates Dental Health Professional Shortage Areas throughout the state. Of the 63 Dental Health Professional Shortage Areas statewide, 44 are located in rural counties. The third map shows Georgia's shortage of Mental Health professionals.
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Of Georgia's 159 counties, 115 are designated Mental Health Professional Shortage Areas and 84 of them are located in rural Georgia.
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Rural Health Resources
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Rural Health Resources
Georgia is a state of great natural, human, and economic resources. With large rural expanses, Georgia is a rapidly growing state that is becoming more urbanized. The proportion of the population that is minority or ethnic, largely African-American, exceeds the national average. The proportion of the state's population that lacks health insurance exceeds the national average, and Georgia's rural and inner-city population lacks adequate geographical access to basic health care services. The percent of the population residing in primary care and dental federally-designated health professional shortage areas exceeds the national average.
Rural and poor urban areas of the state continue to have difficulty recruiting primary care physicians, despite the fact that the state and federal governments have several programs to spur provider recruitment and retention in these communities. The state's Federally Qualified Health Centers in underserved areas voice growing concerns about their difficulty recruiting and retaining physicians and dentists. State officials rank state programs that now support health professions education in underserved areas (i.e., Georgia's Area Health Education Centers) as having a highly favorable impact on provider recruitment and retention.
The Georgia Department of Community Health is responsible for: insuring more than two million Georgians, 25 percent of Georgia's population); maximizing the state's health care purchasing power; planning for insuring 1.7 million uninsured Georgia citizens; and coordinating health care planning for state agencies.
Within the Georgia Department of Community Health, the State Office of Rural Health works to improve access to health care in rural and underserved areas and to reduce health disparities. The State Office of Rural Health works to empower communities to strengthen and maintain the best possible health care using existing resources, provide up-to-date health systems information and technical assistance, build strong partnerships to meet local and regional needs, provide incentives to local areas to implement integrated service delivery systems, and be the single point of contact for all regional issues related to heath care. The State Office of Rural Health also serves as a resource and agent for federal funding and houses the:
Primary Care Office , which includes the J-1 Visa Waiver Program, National Service Corps, Health Professional Shortage Area and Medically Underserved designations
Hospital Services Program which includes the Medicare Rural Hospital Flexibility Grant Program and the Small Rural Hospital Improvement Grant Program
Migrant Health Program Health Care for the Homeless Program Health Networks
The federal Office of Rural Health Policy promotes better health care service in rural America. Established in August 1987, the Office of Rural Health Policy is located within
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Health Resources and Service Administration and is charged with informing and advising the Department of Health and Human Services on matters affecting rural hospitals and health care, coordinating activities within the department that relate to rural health care, and maintaining a national information clearinghouse. The following provides an overview of resources in terms of recruitment and retention of workforces, primary care delivery, rural hospital sustainability, and additional community and statewide resources, such as public health, that positively impact health and health care delivery in rural Georgia. Recruitment and Retention Resources Georgia has many programs that support the recruitment and retention of physicians and other health professionals, including but not limited to:
Primary Care Office J1-Visa Waiver Program National Health Service Corps Area Health Education Centers State Medical Education Board Rural Recruitment and Retention Network (3R Net) Georgia Board of Physician Workforce Public and private institutions of higher learning
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Primary Care Office
The Primary Care Office is housed within the State Office of Rural Health and assists communities in improving access to primary health care in Georgia's rural and urban underserved areas. Through a partnership with the Georgia Association for Primary Health Care, Inc., the Primary Care Office helps plan for new and/or expanded Federally Qualified Health Centers assesses primary care needs, shares data and resources, and assists communities in applying for federal designation for assistance with recruiting of health care providers.
The program partners with federal entities to assist underserved communities with recruitment and retention of physicians and other allied-health professionals through programs such as the J-1 Visa Waiver Program and the National Health Services Corps.
Contact:
Dave Hartin, director, Primary Care Office 229-401-3094 dhartin@dch.ga.gov
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J-1 Visa Physicians
Nearly all foreign medical graduates who come to the United States for residency and training arrive under J-1 exchange program visas. The intent of these visa programs is to provide foreign medical practitioners up-to-date, modern training and to have them, in turn, bring these skills back to their home countries. In order to achieve this objective, all foreign medical graduates J-1 visas carry a two-year home residence requirement. This requirement prevents these visa holders from being granted permanent residence or other types of U.S. work visas until either they have satisfied the two-year requirement, or they have had the requirement waived.
For physicians to obtain a J-1 Visa Waiver, they must practice for three years in a
designated Health Care Professional Shortage Area or Medically Underserved Area. In
Georgia, an average of 55 J-1 Visa Waiver physicians are serving in medically
underserved parts of the state and over 30 J-1 Waiver physicians are serving in rural areas.11
Contact:
Peggy McMillan, State Office of Rural Health 229-401-3088 pmcmillan@dch.ga.gov
11 Health Resources and Services Administration
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National Health Service Corps
The National Health Service Corps was established in 1970 to recruit health professionals for Health Professional Shortage Areas. Health professionals with service obligations under the NHSC Scholarship Program and NHSC Loan Repayment Program and volunteers are sent to communities smaller than 3,500 people with only one primary care physician.
While Georgia has a higher percentage of population living in primary care Heath Professional Shortage Areas than the United States as a whole, Georgia has fewer National Health Service Corps professionals per 10,000 population living in Health Professional Shortage Areas than the United States as a whole. In Georgia, approximately 50 National Health Service Corps health professionals provide an important layer of the safety net and provide care in medically-underserved areas, and more than 25 National Health Service Corps professionals serve in rural parts of the state.12
Contact:
Peggy McMillan, State Office of Rural Health 229-401-3088 pmcmillan@dch.ga.gov
12 Health Resources and Services Administration/National Health Service Corps
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Area Health Education Centers
Area Health Education Centers were begun by the federal government in the late 1970's as programs designed to address health manpower distribution through communitybased initiatives. The federal government, through competitive grants, provides funding to establish Area Health Education Centers programs and centers. The intent is to provide sufficient dollars to build the infrastructure and a case for state support assuming the activities and accomplishments are of value to the communities served by the Area Health Education Centers.
A partnership coordinated between Medical College of Georgia and Mercer University School of Medicine, the Georgia Statewide Area Health Education Centers Network is a complex, multi-disciplinary effort which responds to the problems of health professional supply and distribution in rural and underserved areas of the state.
Since 1984, the Georgia Statewide Area Health Education Centers Network has
represented a growing partnership of health providers, health professions students,
educators, state agencies, and communities joined together with a commitment to
resolve problems through educational support to health professionals in the field, both as students and as practitioners.13
Contact:
Denise Kornegay, Medical College of Georgia 706-721-8331 dkornega@mail.mcg.edu
13 Georgia AHEC Annual Report, 2006
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State Medical Education Board of Georgia
The State Medical Education Board of Georgia was established in 1952 for a two-fold purpose: to provide an adequate supply of physicians in rural areas of the state; and to provide a program of aid to promising medical students who do not have the financial means to attend medical school. The board is instrumental in physician recruitment to rural and underserved Georgia communities. Each year, the board sponsors a medical fair where rural Georgia communities are invited to speak with physicians in training concerning future medical practice opportunities.
Contact:
Ben Robinson, State Medical Education Board of Georgia 404-206-5426 brobinson@dch.ga.gov
Georgia Board for Physician Workforce
The Georgia Board for Physician Workforce monitors changes in Georgia's physician workforce with emphasis on the geographic distribution of physicians in the State. Reports available on their Web site help to identify areas of need, monitor the supply and distribution of practicing physicians in Georgia, plan for health services, determine funding for residency programs, and locate facilities.
Contact:
Ben Robinson, State Medical Education Board of Georgia 404-206-5426 brobinson@dch.ga.gov
National Rural Recruitment and Retention Network (3R Net)
3R Net is made up of state organizations such as State Offices of Rural Health, Area Health Education Centers, Cooperative Agreement Agencies and State Primary Care Associations. These not-for-profit organizations help health professionals locate practice sites in rural areas throughout the country.
Contact:
Nicole Newman, Georgia Department of Community Health 229-401-3090 nnewman@dch.ga.gov http://www.3rnet.org
Public and Private Institutions of Higher Learning
Numerous public and private institutions of higher learning in Georgia provide training for a full array of health professionals. Four such institutions train physicians. They are the Medical College of Georgia, Morehouse School of Medicine, Emory University School of Medicine, and Mercer University School of Medicine.
Delivery of Primary Care
In Georgia, several systems support the delivery of primary care:
Federally Qualified Health Centers
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Rural Health Clinics Volunteer Clinics Georgia Farmworker Health Program
Federally Qualified Health Centers
The Federally Qualified Health Center Program is a federal grant program funded under Section 330 of the Public Health Service Act to provide for primary and preventive health care services in medically-underserved areas throughout the U.S. and its territories. This program, administered by Health Resources and Services Administration, provides grant funding for organizations to provide care to underserved populations.
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Four different types of health centers are funded through this program including: Federally Qualified Health Center Migrant Health Center Health Care for the Homeless Program Public Housing Primary Care Program
Federally Qualified Heath Centers are public or private corporations created through the initiative of local citizens interested in bringing health care to their areas. They are governed by consumer-majority boards of directors, and thus represent the communities they serve. With the help of the community, the board attracts local and outside funding, develops facilities, purchases equipment, hires staff, markets services, and forms linkages with other area health providers such as hospitals and specialty providers. Georgia is home to 21 Federally Qualified Health Centers entities with 93 total service sites in 53 counties. Forty-eight sites are located in rural counties, and 45 sites are located in urban counties. The Georgia Association for Primary Health Care Inc. supports the development of Federally Qualified Health Centers in Georgia through advocacy to improve access to comprehensive primary health care services for all medically underserved Georgians and to support the continued development and expansion of community-based health center practice systems throughout the state.
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Rural Health Clinics
A Rural Health Clinic is a clinic certified to receive special Medicare and Medicaid reimbursement.
The purpose of the Rural Health Clinic program is to improve access to primary care in underserved rural areas. Rural Health Clinics are required to use a team approach of physicians and midlevel practitioners (nurse practitioners, physician assistants, and certified nurse midwives) to provide services. The clinic must be staffed at least 50 percent of the time with a midlevel practitioner. Rural Health Clinics may also provide other health care services, such as mental health or vision services, but reimbursement for those services may not be based on their allowable costs. In Georgia, there are 97 Rural Health Clinics in 59 rural Georgia counties.
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Georgia Farmworker Health Program
The Georgia Farmworker Health Program was created to improve the general health status of Georgia's migrant and seasonal farmworkers and their families by providing cost effective, culturally appropriate primary health care, arranging for other levels of health care through collaboration and advocacy, and working collaboratively with local organizations and groups. Contact: Katrice Brown, director, Migrant and Seasonal Farmworker and Healthcare for the Homeless programs
229-401-3096 kbrown@dch.ga.gov
Georgia Farmworker Health Program provides primary health care services for 21 rural counties at six project sites:
Decatur Farmworker Clinic serves Decatur, Grady, Mitchell, Seminole, and Thomas counties
South Central Primary Care Clinic serves Atkinson and Coffee counties 49
Ellaville Primary Medical Clinic serves Crisp, Macon, Schley, Sumter, and Taylor counties
Ellenton Clinic serves Brooks, Colquitt, Cook, and Tift counties East Georgia Health Care Center serves Candler, Tattnall, and Toombs counties Migrant Farmworker Clinic, LLC. serves Echols and Lowndes counties
Georgia Volunteer Health Care Program
The Georgia Volunteer Health Care Program is available to communities to assist volunteer health care professionals with clinic management and projects, including health care provider recruitment, contracting for sovereign immunity protection, administering quality assurance review, and ensuring that providers have the proper licenses. Contact: Pauline Lindstrom, director, Georgia Volunteer Health Care Program
404-463-7638 plinstrom@dch.ga.gov
The State Office of Rural Health sponsored grant funds to support the development of volunteer clinics to increase the number of patients receiving medical care through Georgia's Volunteer Health Care Program. In 2006, the State Office of Rural Health provided $580,000 of state and federal funds to support the development of 11 of the 55 volunteer clinics participating in the Georgia Volunteer Health Care Program.
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Rural Hospital Resources
Georgia promotes programs that support the sustainability of rural hospitals. Rural hospital utilization patterns reflect the poorer health of rural Georgians and reflect the demand on rural hospitals. Georgia has 67 rural hospitals, 35 of which are designated as critical access.
Critical Access Hospitals
The Critical Access Hospital Program is designed to aid in the continuation of health care services for rural residents. A Critical Access Hospital is a hospital certified to receive cost-based reimbursement from Medicare. The reimbursement that Critical Access Hospitals receive is intended to improve financial performance and reduce hospital closures. Contact: Patsy Whaley, State Off ice of Rural Health
229-401-3092 pwhaley@dch.ga.gov
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Small Rural Hospital Improvement Program
Of Georgia's 67 rural hospitals, 54 are eligible to receive funding from the Small Rural Hospital Improvement Program grant. To be eligible for Small Rural Hospital Improvement Program grant funding, a hospital must:
Have 49 or less available beds as reported on the hospital's most recent Medicare Cost Report;
Be located outside a Metropolitan Statistical Area or located in a rural census tract of an Metropolitan Statistical Area as determined under the Goldsmith Modification or Rural Urban Commuting Areas;
Be defined as non-federal, short-term, general acute care facility; Possess Critical Access Hospital designation; or Be located in an area designated by any State law or regulation as a rural area or
rural hospital. Contact: Patsy Whaley, State Office of Rural Health
229-401-3092 pwhaley@dch.ga.gov
SHIP is designed to assist small rural hospitals in the reduction of medical errors and support quality improvement, obtain products and services to comply with the Health
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Information Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) regulations and to function effectively within the guidelines of the Perspective Payment System . Each year eligible hospitals in Georgia have the option of pooling financial resources by joining one of two Small Rural Hospital Improvement Program consortiums that provide innovative programs, products and services to address varied quality improvement and HIPAA issues or they may select hospital-specific plans that target their individual needs. Funding for SHIP is made possible by HRSA and is administered by the State Office of Rural Health.
Rural Hospital FLEX Program
The Medicare Rural Hospital Flexibility Program was born out of the Balanced Budget Act of 1997 and focused on the development of Critical Access Hospital designations for hospitals identified as at risk for closure or based on pre-established eligibility criteria for Critical Access Hospital status. Since 1999, Georgia has received over $4.5 million in Medicare Rural Hospital Flexibility grant funding resulting in the conversion and sustainability of 35 rural Georgia hospitals. The Medicare Rural Hospital Flexibility program helps to sustain the rural health care infrastructure with the Critical Access Hospitals as the hub of an organized system of care (in communities where they exist) through the mechanisms of the Medicare Rural Hospital Flexibility program. These mechanisms include:
Development of the Rural Health Plan Health Care Networks Quality Improvement Emergency Management Services integration initiatives
Additionally, FLEX must foster the growth of collaborative rural health care delivery systems across the continuum of care at the community level and with appropriate external relationships for referral and support, thus maintaining access to high quality care for rural Medicare beneficiaries. Funding for FLEX is made possible by HRSA and is administered by the State Office of Rural Health.
Contact: Patsy Whaley, State Office of Rural Health 229-401-3092 pwhaley@dch.ga.gov
Hospital Supply and Utilization
Georgia's rural communities are home to approximately 30 percent of the state's population but only 14 percent of the state's available hospital beds. Rural hospitals serve only 11 percent of the state's hospital admissions. This may be due to the lack of a local hospital, lack of needed specialized services, or a preference for non-local hospitals. Perhaps more importantly, while Georgia's rural hospitals admit 10 percent of the state's total admissions, they admit 15 percent of the state's total Medicare admissions, reflective of the greater share of elderly Georgians living in rural areas and highlighting the need for local access.
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Hospitals by Type, Georgia 2004 Source: Department of Community Health, Division of Health Planning
Designation Rural Urban Total
Type
General
Psychiatric and Other Specialty
Hospitals
General
Psychiatric and Other Specialty
Hospitals
General
Psychiatric and Other Specialty
Hospitals
Number 65 2 87 25 152 27
Supply and Utilization of General Hospitals, Georgia 2004
Designation
Number of Hospitals
Capacity Beds
Beds per 1000
Population
Admission
Medicare Admission
Medicaid Admissions
SCHIP Admission
Total Inpatient Days
Rural Urban Total
65 42.8%
87 57.2%
152 100.0%
3,285 13.6% 20,814 86.4% 24,099 100.0%
97,242
1.9
53,295
10.5%
831,745
2.9
312,855
89.5%
928,987
2.7
366,150
100.0%
20,366 160,836 181,202
434 4,098 4,532
388,420 8.8%
4,032,510 91.2%
4,420,930 100.0%
Source: Annual Hospital Questionnaire, Georgia Dept. of Community Health/Division of Health Planning, 2004
Network Resources
Collaboration among various stakeholders and across county lines has been identified as tremendously important to health improvement in rural Georgia. The Georgia Department of Community Health has an eight-year history of investment in building rural collaboration through network development. ORHP also supports rural collaboration through its network and outreach grant programs.
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Networks for Rural Health Networks for Rural Health, funded by the Georgia Department of Community Health/State Office of Rural Health, is designed to help rural providers and community leaders build health care systems which:
Are clinically relevant Are financially viable Improve health care of rural residents Provide access to the uninsured Improve overall health status
In 1996, Georgia's rural health crisis came to the forefront. A Medicaid case study confirmed the state's need for improved health care delivery systems in rural Georgia. Since 1996, Georgia government and its partners have invested in an evolving strategy to organize, support, and build capacity for sustainable rural health networks.
Rural health networks play an increasingly important role strengthening rural health care systems to increase access to health and human services and improve health status. More than 64 rural Georgia counties work within rural health networks to fill gaps in access to and availability of health and human services.
Georgia's rural health networks help bridge the health care gap between rural and urban areas and meet the needs of the communities they serve. During tight economies, rural health networks are challenged to meet the health needs of their communities, provide care for more people, and continue their work to improve Georgia's health care safety net, all with less funding.
In 2006, the State Office of Rural Health awarded the East Georgia Health Cooperative a state-funded $200,000 network revitalization grant. East Georgia Health Cooperative is an eleven county, nonprofit collaborative, comprised of five hospitals, three community health centers, rural health clinics, and affiliated physicians, as well as representation from public health and two community members. The network revitalization grant will support the re-establishment of a strong strategic planning focus with long term sustainability of program and operational structure. Funding for the twoyear period includes leadership staffing as well as operational support, sustainability and grant writing consulting assistance.
Rural Outreach Grant Program Office of Rural Health Planning's Outreach Grant Program is designed to encourage the development of new and innovative health care delivery systems in rural communities that lack essential health care services.
The emphasis of this grant program is on service delivery through creative strategies requiring the grantee to form a network with at least two additional partners. Programs have varied greatly and have brought care that would not otherwise have been available to at least 2 million rural citizens across the country. Through consortia of schools,
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churches, emergency medical service providers, local universities, private practitioners and others, rural communities have managed to create hospice care, bring health check-ups to children, and provide prenatal care to women in remote areas. In 2005 and 2006, Outreach Grants were awarded to the following Georgia communities:
Floyd County Board of Health, Rome Turner County Board of Education, Ashburn Lincoln County Commission, Lincolnton Hospital Authority of Washington County, Sandersville Irwin County Board of Health, Ocilla Evans County Health Department, Claxton
Rural Network Development Grant Program Network Development Grants provide funding to help rural communities strengthen their health care systems. Grants for up to three years support rural providers who work together in formal networks, alliances, coalitions, or partnerships to integrate administrative, clinical, financial, and technological functions across their organizations. This integration of functions and services helps to overcome the fragmentation of health care services in rural areas, improves coordination of those services, and achieves economies of scale. This program does not support direct patient care services.
These grants are designed to further ongoing collaborative relationships among health care organizations by funding rural health networks that focus on integrating clinical, information, administrative, and financial systems across members. The goal is to strengthen rural health care systems at the community, regional, and state levels by funding these formal, horizontally or vertically integrated networks.
Grant funds typically are used to acquire staff, contract with technical experts, and purchase other resources to 'build' the network. Grant awards provided by ORHP support up to a three-year implementation process. To be eligible, the applicant organization must be a public or nonprofit entity that is a network or is a member of a network that includes at least three separately owned health care providers or other entities that provide or support the delivery of health care services. Additionally, the applicant's administrative headquarters must be located in a designated rural county or rural ZIP code of an urban county. In 2005, the Turner County Board of Education in Ashburn, Goodwin Community Health Center in Brunswick, and the East Georgia Health Care Center in Swainsboro benefited from Network Development Grants.
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Additional Resources
Other important support services for rural Georgians include services for the aging, public health, telemedicine, emergency medical services, and trauma care.
Programs for the Elderly
Because Georgia's older population disproportionately impacts rural areas, rural Georgia needs a greater density of services available to serve an aging population. A 2005 report by the Georgia Health Policy Center and the Fiscal Research Center "Georgia's Aging Population: What to Expect and How to Cope" examined the statesponsored programs available to rural and urban Georgians. It found:
Georgia's supply of rural nursing facility beds (169 facilities; 15,094 beds) is currently adequate. Unfortunately, the availability of institutional beds makes nursing facilities the most convenient option for rural Georgians making long-term care decisions
The aging of Georgia's population will impact rural areas first; so adequate future staffing remains a concern
Personal Care Homes14 are concentrated in urban areas. Because only 25 percent of the Personal Care Home bed supply is in rural areas, the Personal Care Home market under-serves Georgia's rural seniors. With less choice, Georgia's rural seniors are more likely to turn to more expensive nursing facility care
Georgia's Community Care Services Program15 provides services in each of Georgia's 159 counties, coordinated by twelve Area Agencies on Aging . Community Care Service Program recipients are distributed fairly evenly among Georgia's urban and rural areas. Unfortunately, the demand for the Community Care Service Program far exceeds available funding. In FY2004, 5,018 Georgians were on a waiting list for Community Care Service Program, up from 3,198 in FY200116
Georgia's SOURCE17 program primarily serves urban clients, but it is continuing to expand across the state
Public Health
The Division of Public Health, within the Georgia Department of Human Resources, is the lead agency entrusted by the people of the State of Georgia with the ultimate responsibility for the health of communities and the entire population. At the state level, DPH is divided into numerous branches, sections, programs and offices, and at the
14 Any dwelling that provides or arranges for the provision of housing, food service, and one or more personal services for two or more adults who are not related to the owner or administrator by blood or marriage. 15 The purpose of CCSP is to help eligible recipients remain in their homes, a caregiver's home, or other community settings for as long as possible. A CCSP recipient must meet the medical, functional, and financial criteria for nursing facility placement and receive physician approval that CCSP can meet the recipient's needs. 16 "Community Care Services Program Annual Report", State FY 2004, Division of Aging Services, Georgia Department of Human Resources. Counts include non-elderly and elderly CCSP recipients (2004). 17 Service Options Using Resources in a Community Environment (SOURCE) seeks to serve Georgia's seniors in their homes or communities for as long as possible. SOURCE links primary care with an array of long-term health services in the recipient's home or community to reduce or eliminate the need for institutional care.
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local level, Division of Public Health functions via 18 health districts and 159 county health departments. Each County Board of Health is made up of a county commissioner, mayor of the largest municipality or their designee (who must be an elected official), Superintendent of the county school system or their designee, a licensed physician in active practice appointed by the county governing body, an advocate for consumers of health services, a consumer representing the needy, underprivileged or elderly, and a person interested in promoting public health. The District Health Director functions as the Chief Executive Officer of each county board.
In late 2005, more than 800 Georgians came together for two days at the Summit for a Healthy Georgia to develop a statewide vision for improved health. Convened by the DPH, the summit yielded seven areas of emphasis on which communities throughout the state are focusing to improve the health status of all Georgians. The areas of emphasis are as follows:
Improve access to health care Promote the community culture and conditions necessary for healthy lifestyles,
including factors of: o Physical activity o Sexual behaviors 58
o Nutrition o Alcohol and drug abuse o Tobacco o Vehicular safety Decrease the number of uninsured and underinsured Georgians Promote safe communities Identify and eliminate inequities in health status Address poverty as a root cause of poor health status Engage educational partners Telemedicine Telemedicine is a health care delivery model that applies high-speed telecommunications systems, computer technology, and specialized medical cameras to examine, diagnose, treat and educate patients from a distance. For example, through a telemedicine encounter, a patient in far southwestern Bainbridge may seek medical treatment from one of Georgia's leading specialty hospitals without spending the time and money required to travel for an in-person appointment.
The program strives to increase access to specialty care throughout Georgia, improve timeliness of diagnosis and treatment, and improve the quality of care for rural patients. The goal is to enable patients anywhere in Georgia to have access to specialty care within a 30-minute drive or less.
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The network will provide an open web of access points established throughout the state, connecting rural areas where barriers to specialty care typically exist with advanced tertiary care centers in larger cities. Now developed, the open access network offers unprecedented access to specialty care:
It connects each presentation site directly to any one of five specialty centers for diagnosis, consultations and reviews, dramatically enhancing access to specialty care for the rural patient
It enables presentation sites to connect to each other primary care provider to primary care provider for peer review, collaboration and educational opportunities
It enables the addition of new locations as the need or opportunity arises
Emergency Medical Services Emergency Medical Services in Georgia are centered on providing medical aid and safe transportation to sick and injured people. It requires a collaboration of community organizations, state and local agencies, and private groups to meet the demands and challenges associated with providing pre-hospital care and related health services to citizens. Emergency Medical Services is an umbrella term used to describe the continuum of pre-hospital activities that begin with a rapid response to an initial call for help. Twenty counties in Georgia do not have a 911 system.
Emergency Medical Services has developed into a medical discipline over the past several decades in Georgia. In the past, funeral homes provided ambulance services, and patient care did not begin until the patient arrived at the hospital. Today, in stark contrast, many of Georgia's Emergency Medical Services personnel are prepared and trained to provide pre-hospital care in emergency situations, which is considered advanced life support.
Georgia has an estimated 1,739 ground ambulances and 282 ambulance service providers. Georgia has five air ambulance services, including: Air Med in Augusta; Life Star One in Savannah; Children's Response Air and Emory Flight/Life Net Georgia; and, Rescue Air in Atlanta. Most of Georgia, especially south of Interstate 16, is not covered by air ambulance. Georgia's 159 counties are grouped into 10 geographical Emergency Medical Services regions. Georgia ranks 24th among the states in size 59,441 square miles. The smallest region, Region 3, covers 2,343 square miles; however, it serves nearly 3.5 million people because it covers the counties of Fulton, Cobb, Douglas, Clayton, DeKalb, Gwinnett, Rockdale, and Newton.
The largest region in size, Region 9, which covers 12,533 square miles, serves nearly one million people in 24 counties. A look at Region 8 reveals a 27-county area in rural Southwest Georgia. Although there is a Level 2 Trauma Center within this region, Archbold Memorial Hospital in Thomasville, it covers 10,670 square miles and there is no air ambulance service.
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Trauma Care A trauma system is a strategically organized approach to injury prevention, emergency medical services pre-hospital response, hospital-based acute care, and post-hospital rehabilitation that is fully integrated within a state's public health system.
Red Level 1 Yellow Level 2 Green Level 3 Purple: Level 2 Pediatric Blue Dashed: Potential Level 4
Source: Georgia Department of Human Resources, Division of Public Health, 2004.
The presence of a trauma system means that there is complete coordination between injury prevention, Emergency Medical Services (including air and ground medical transportation) and regional referring hospitals. It also means that there is a systematic integration of the care provided to the very seriously injured at all stages of treatment. The resources required for each component of a trauma system are clearly identified, deployed, and studied to ensure that all injured patients gain access to the appropriate level of care in a timely, coordinated, and cost-effective manner. The benefits of a trauma system can reduce the preventable death rate by 10 to 30 percent, possibly up to 50 percent. Studies of trauma systems in the U.S. where the most severely injured patients are directed to specialized trauma centers show that the benefit of an organized system of trauma care can reduce the risk of death significantly. Georgia's trauma death rate is 20 percent above the national average. If Georgia could reach the national average, it is likely that 700 lives a year would be saved.
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Recent estimates suggest that only 30 percent of major traumatic injuries in Georgia are treated at designated trauma centers. Depending on where the victim is located in the state, the pre-hospital response may require from three to 45 minutes. There may be an additional 10 to 60 minutes before the patient reaches a medical facility, which may not be the appropriate facility. It is easy to continue to increase the passage of crucial time, considering that the patient may have needed on-scene extrication or needed to be transferred from one facility to another. Additional hours, even as many as eight or 10, could possibly lapse before reaching the appropriate level of care. There are still many areas of the state that do not have rapid access to trauma centers. Georgia's hospitals provide quality care to injured patients; however, the standard of care is not uniform. Additional resources are available in Appendix B.
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Plan for Improvement
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Plan for Improvement
Along with establishing the vision and goals for the 2007 Georgia Rural Health Plan, the State Office of Rural Health and its partners identified priority actions for each goal. These priority actions represent areas of concentration within each goal and serve as the strategies that are both most likely to contribute to improving health in rural Georgia and to be most feasible for implementation in rural communities. They are focused steps that communities may undertake in their work to address a particular goal or goals. In addition, with input from partners and stakeholders, best practices and community projects were compiled to demonstrate how communities in Georgia and across the nation are addressing the health needs of their rural residents. The best practices and community projects is not an exhaustive listing, but are examples of initiatives related to each of the four established goals. Georgia communities who want to take action can draw on this collection of success stories to pattern their own efforts. They are included as examples for communities to consider, tailor, and implement in ways that best meet their individual concerns and needs. Georgia's rural communities are encouraged to contact these initiatives for information on replicating their successes.
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Goal 1:
Build a system of care that is unified, clinically relevant, financially viable and responsive to community needs
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Goal 1: Build a system of care that is unified, clinically relevant, financially viable and responsive to community needs.
Priority Action 1. a: Promote the appropriate distribution of health care facilities, workforce and comprehensive services by creating an inventory of existing health care service delivery options for rural communities with periodic reviews and dissemination
Priority Action 1. b: Increase the appropriate utilization of health services by creating and promoting the use of local databases of resources across the continuum of care
Priority Action 1. c: Increase the efficiency of rural health care systems through the development and integration of multi-county health plans that are inclusive across the continuum of care utilizing local collaboratives and provide accompanying external, objective technical support
The following are community projects and best practices that showcase initiatives in Georgia and across the nation. These examples are resources for communities that strive to move toward a more unified system of care.
GEORGIA Coastal Medical Access Project Glynn, Camden and McIntosh counties, Georgia Coastal Medical Access Project is a 501(c) 3 founded in 2002 and serving the counties of Glynn, Camden and McIntosh. CMAP provides three distinct but interrelated services: primary care services from two free clinics, a pharmaceutical assistance program (MedBank), and Intensive Case Management of chronic conditions. Coastal Medical Access Project is a donated care model with over 100 volunteer physicians and medical professionals and over 125 lay volunteers. It has provided more than 5,000 patient visits to more than 1,300 clients, totaling more than $850,000 in donated care and $9 million in free pharmaceutical drugs.
Coastal Medical Access Project PO Box 1357, 900 Bay St. Brunswick, GA 31521 Patricia J. Kota RN MSPL, CEO 912-554-3559 ext. 11 pkota@cmapga.org www.cmapga.org
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Colquitt Regional Medical Center Moultrie, Georgia Colquitt Regional Medical Center is located in an agricultural community in Southwest Georgia. The hospital operates in an area where it is forced to compete with larger facilities to attract health professionals drawn from a small pool of eligible employees and has struggled to fill key health care positions. In order to address the workforce shortage it was facing, Colquitt Regional Medical Center focused its efforts on both employee recruitment and retention. Its efforts to recruit qualified health professions include partnering with local schools to promote health care professions through job shadowing; expanding the existing scholarship program for hard-to-recruit positions; and implementing Georgia's Intellectual Capital Partnership Program which facilitates hospital/university partnerships to provide health professional training and certification programs for non-traditional students. In addition, Colquitt Regional Medical Center funds a portion of a registered nurse program in a nearby town and receives nursing students doing their clinical rotations.
In addition to their focused efforts on recruitment, the hospital believes that it is equally important to maintain strong job satisfaction and a quality work environment. The hospital focuses on retention in a number of ways, including using bedside computers that allow for electronic charting, the use of wireless telephones, and creating a preceptor program for newly hired nurses.
As a result of their efforts, Colquitt saw a decline in its vacancy rate and has been able to reduce its nurse turnover rate during the first two years of the program.
Colquitt Regional Medical Center 3131 South Main Street Moultrie, GA 31768 Dawn Johns, Human Resources Director 229-985-3420 djohns@colquittregional.com www.colquittregional.com
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Community Health Works Bibb, Crawford, Houston, Jones, Monroe, Peach and Twiggs counties in Central Georgia Community Health Works is a regional collaborative representing physicians, behavioral health organizations, county governments, hospitals, public health and social service providers, pharmacies and others committed to implementing regional solutions to facilitate access to care. Today, Community Health Works is a regional center for health innovation, recognized both statewide and nationally as one of the best of its kind. Community Health Works programs include:
Rx for the Uninsured, Community Health Work's original program, assists adults, 19 to 64 years old, with incomes under 200 percent of Federal Poverty Level, who have one of the targeted disease states: diabetes, hypertension, heart disease, depression and cancer. The program utilizes a case management system that provides advocacy, disease education and disease management, referral services, and access to donated medical services.
The Central Georgia Cancer Coalition, organized in 2002, addresses disparities in access to care for cancer victims and the prevalence of poor outcomes among Central Georgia cancer patients. The Coalition works to promote consumer education and cancer screenings, clinical research, and collaboration among care providers.
Middle Georgia Multi-Share, a program that would bring traditional employer and employee contributions together with non-traditional funding, so that cost is shared among multiple sources. If the program is successful in research and development, it will be of great benefit to one of Central Georgia's hardest working communities, its small businesses.
Community Health Works 105 Patrol Rd. Forsyth, GA 31029 Greg Dent, CEO 478-994-1914 gdent@chwg.org www.chwg.org
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Promotores de Salud Program Murray and Whitfield Counties, Georgia The Promotores de Salud program seeks to empower Latinos living in Northwest Georgia to take control of their own health by teaching them how to properly access appropriate health care and community resources by increasing their health care literacy. The program trains bilingual, culturally-competent community health workers to serve as a trusted bridge between Latino community members and the health care system. The health workers, or Promotores, assist their clients in understanding and navigating the health care system, provide health education and case management. In 2004, its first year of operation, the Promotores de Salud program received over 200 referrals from local schools, medical providers and social services agencies. Promotores reached more than 18,600 individuals at local health fairs and community events, initiated a prescription assistance service, and provided case management for 65 individuals with chronic and acute conditions. The Promotores also conducted extensive community-based health education. Northwest Georgia Health Care Partnership PO Box 182 Dalton, GA 30722 Nancy Kennedy, Executive Director 706-272-6663 nkennedy@hhcs.org www.nwgahealthpartners.org
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Service Options Using Resources in a Community Environment (SOURCE) Statewide, Georgia SOURCE (Service Options Using Resources in a Community Environment) is a Medicaid demonstration waiver program for frail elderly and disabled beneficiaries that seeks to prevent hospital and nursing home care or speed the return to the community from a nursing home or hospital. SOURCE is an enhanced primary care case management program that integrates primary medical care with home and communitybased services through case managers who work with the beneficiaries and their primary care physicians. An assessment helps to determine how much care a participant needs. An individual care plan is designed based on the need for medical monitoring and assistance with functional tasks. Family members and other informal caregivers as well as staff from support agencies participate in care plans. In addition to the core services, SOURCE offers home delivered meals, adult day care, personal care home and 24-hour medical access.
SOURCE is a program of the Division of Medical Assistance in the DCH and serves approximately 7,000 frail elderly and disabled Georgians who are eligible for SSI/Medicaid (Supplemental Security Income). People under the age of 65 are eligible if they have a significant disability and are receiving SSI/Medicaid. Eight SOURCE sites administer the program in 120 of the 159 counties in Georgia. The characteristics of the SOURCE administration sites vary significantly, and include nursing facilities, hospitals with outpatient clinics, adult day care centers and area agencies on aging.
St. Joseph's/Candler of Savannah 11705 Mercy Boulevard Savannah, GA 31419 Hunter Hurst, Executive Director of St. Joseph's/Candler's Georgia Infirmary Inc. and SOURCE program 912-819-1505 HurstH@sjchs.org www.sjchs.org
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Spring Creek Health Cooperative Blakely, Georgia An innovative multi-county partnership is changing the way Southwest Georgians manage their health, and it is saving taxpayers millions of dollars. The counties of Early, Miller, Calhoun and Clay joined in 2001 as the Spring Creek Health Cooperative to improve access to health care for and health status of the uninsured. Since then, the network's mission has evolved to help those at risk for chronic disease in its service area better utilize the health care system and make healthier lifestyle choices.
Through its partnerships with Calhoun County Hospital, Early Memorial Hospital, Miller County Hospital, and public health departments, the Spring Creek Health Cooperative works to meet the health needs of this population and provide education to reduce and prevent the costly complications associated with chronic disease.
The Spring Creek Health Cooperative offers case management services for the lowincome, indigent and uninsured or underinsured patients with chronic disease. The cooperative manages cases by connecting its targeted patient population with the resources they need to take charge of their health. From regular physician visits and education to helping patients obtain medications at little or no cost, Spring Creek Health Cooperative is producing substantial results in improving the health of its communities.
The cooperative provides case management to more than 250 patient members and pharmaceutical management for an additional 250 or more members. These management services add up to a healthier community and more than $1.65 million in savings per year for taxpayers. These savings are especially important to hospitals in Miller, Calhoun and Early counties because they are Critical Access Hospitals. Critical Access Hospitals provide essential services to a community and are reimbursed by Medicare on a "reasonable cost basis" to improve their financial performance and thereby reduce hospital closures.
Spring Creek Cooperative #3 South Jefferson Ave. Blakely, GA 39823 Sheila P. Freeman, Executive Director 229-723-6061 sfreeman_schc@windstream.net
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NATIONAL Community Health Access Project Mansfield, Ohio The Community Health Access Project is a not-for-profit organization located in Richland County Ohio. Community Health Access Project employs, trains, and supports Community Health Workers in three Ohio counties. CHAP utilizes a system called Pathways, which allows them to document and better focus on specific outcomes for clients served. Pathways is a standardized methodology for improving health outcomes and was developed and implemented in collaboration with medical, social and community-based providers. In this methodology, critical social services as well as medical services are linked together in a common accountable outcome production tool. Community Health Access Project uses geomapping of outcomes to identify areas with greatest need.
The Community Health Worker model was signed into law as a new profession in the state of Ohio as part of the state's budget bill July 2003. Through this landmark legislation Community Health Workers were credentialed under the Ohio Board of Nursing. The services that Community Health Workers provide through Community Health Access Project are Medicaid reimbursable. Utilizing Pathways and the care coordination services of Community Health Workers, Community Health Access Project has demonstrated an 83 percent reduction in low birth weight for enrolled high risk women identified within the high risk census tracts of Richland County. Community Health Access Project has demonstrated 7,000 positive outcomes related to immunization, lead exposure, truancy, chemical dependency, employment, etc.
Community Health Access Project Ocie Hill Neighborhood Center 445 Bowman Street Mansfield, OH 44903 Dr. Mark Redding, Medical Director 419-525-2555 reddingz@att.net http://www.chap-ohio.net
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Holy Cross Hospital- CATCH Collaborative Taos, New Mexico Holy Cross Hospital recognizes the importance of effectively coordinating inpatient treatment and outpatient disease management and support for diabetes patients in order to prevent manageable diabetes-related complications from turning into acute and/or chronic conditions requiring hospitalization. The Community Wellness department at Holy Cross Hospital offers a comprehensive inpatient to outpatient diabetes program including counseling medical nutrition therapy, stress management, weight loss classes and support groups, and the provision of diabetes supplies such as insulin, glucose meters and test strips to those individuals with diabetes who are underinsured or uninsured.
In addition to the education and support that individuals receive from the inpatient and outpatient Holy Cross Hospital diabetes programs, prescription assistance and pharmaceutical care are also provided through Collaborative Action for Taos County Health . Collaborative Action for Taos County Health is an independent, non-profit health care organization that works to improve access to, and coordination of, wellness and disease management in Taos and the surrounding area. Through Collaborative Action for Taos County Health, patients are matched with a patient advocate who assists with intake, referrals and advocacy as well as provision of disease management support. Holy Cross Hospital is a major contributing member of Collaborative Action for Taos County Health.
Holy Cross Hospital 1397 Weimer Road P.O. Box DD Taos, NM 87571 Susan Kargula, RN, MSN, CDE, Director of the Community Wellness Department 505-751-5750 skargula@taoshospital.org www.taoshospital.org
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Local Access to Coordinated Health Care Durham, North Carolina Local Access to Coordinated Health Care was designed as an outreach, primary care and case management system for any Durham resident without health insurance to assist them in better managing their health and securing appropriate health services. Duke (University) Community Health established a consortium to provide services and advocate for improved access to care. Consortium members include local hospitals and health centers, community organizations and faith-based groups and Durham County and City agencies. Initially funded through a grant from the U.S Bureau of Primary Health Care and now funded by Duke University, Local Access to Coordinated Health Care provides support to patients in need of chronic disease management. Since its inception in 2002, Local Access to Coordinated Health Care has enrolled over 6,500 uninsured people into the program, connected patients to a regular source of medical care, decreased the use of emergency rooms as primary health care, and provided patient support and care management to thousands of families in their homes and neighborhoods. LATCH A Duke Division of Community Health Program 4321 Medical Park, Suite 102 Durham, NC 27704 Yvette McMiller, Coordinator 919-620-8034 ext 224 yvette.mcmiller@duke.edu www.communityhealth.mc.duke.edu/clinical/?/latch
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Migrant Health Promotion Statewide, Michigan Community Health Worker programs have been shown to increase health seeking behavior as well as encourage preventive behavior among diverse populations across the United States. Community Health Worker interventions are particularly suited to encourage people to access preventive health care like screenings and prenatal care, and are effective at providing trusted and knowledgeable navigational assistance to people who are otherwise unable or unwilling to engage with the health care system. Salud Para Todos, Health for All, trains Community Health Workers (called Promotores and Promotoras) to address mental health, substance abuse, stress and violence in their camps and communities. The program provides a model for reaching isolated farmworker and rural communities and breaking down the cultural barriers that prevent community members from seeking care. Promotores (as) have demonstrated the benefits and promise of offering peer support around health issues which are complex, painful and all too often stigmatized. In collaboration with Migrant and Community Health Centers, the Salud Para Todos program supports Promotores as they provide health education, referrals and advocacy. Sixty percent of farmworkers who participated in Salud Para Todos Programs in Colorado, Michigan and North Carolina reported decreased stress levels as a result of the program. Migrant Health Promotion 224 West Michigan Avenue Saline, MI 48176 Kimberly Kratz, MSW, MPH, Executive Director 734-944-0244 capacity@migranthealth.org info@migranthealth.org www.migranthealth.org
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Goal 2:
Promote health and wellness in all aspects of daily living
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Goal 2: Promote health and wellness in all aspects of daily living
Priority Action 2. a: Increase healthy behaviors related to nutrition and physical activity among children and adolescents by working with educational systems, other governmental entities, private and grassroots community groups and families to promote healthy lifestyles
Priority Action 2. b: Promote partnerships among community based groups to create solutions to improve healthy behaviors related to obesity, diabetes, cardiovascular disease, cancer, and infant health through the development of multi-county programs
Priority Action 2. c: Decrease infant mortality and low-birth weight by promoting pre-and post-natal care
The following are community projects and best practices in Georgia and across the nation. These are examples of successful initiatives for communities that want to promote health and wellness.
GEORGIA Get Healthy Together/Project Triune Village Upson County, Georgia Get Healthy Together/Project Triune Village began as a program to address childhood obesity and the cardiac health of the youth in the community. It has expanded to be an after school program that helps educate local children about the importance of proper nutrition, fitness and exercise programs. It also includes tutoring programs, classes on life and social skills, and abstinence education. Project Triune Village is centered in a public housing area that has a childhood obesity rate higher than the national average.
Upson Regional Medical Center 801 West Gordon Street Thomaston, GA 30286 Sue Mangum, Director of Cardiac Services 706-647-8111 suem@urmc.org www.urmc.org
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Outreach to Migrant Camp Workers Tattnall, Toombs and Candler counties, Georgia To serve the migrant camp workers health needs, staff from the East Georgia Health Care Center visits the camps during the harvest season (eight weeks from April to June). This effort began in 2003. They offer similar but fewer services during the fall planting season, when fewer residents are in the camps. During harvest, each Sunday there are visits from nurse practitioners and physicians who provide primary care services and mobile lab services so test results can be immediate. They also provide quality of life items, including over-the-counter medications, deodorant, soap, socks, sunscreen, and safety goggles. East Georgia Health Care is a participant in a migrant health fair serving approximately 2,000 people; there are bi-lingual providers on site, and items are labeled in Spanish.
East Georgia Health Care Center 316 North Main St., P.O. Box 807 Swainsboro, GA 30401 Jennie Wren Denmark, Executive Director 478-237-6262 x107 JWDenmark@eghc.org, www.eghc.org
Perinatal Health Partners Southeast Georgia: Appling, Atkinson, Bacon, Brantley, Bulloch, Candler, Charlton, Clinch, Coffee, Evans, Jeff Davis, Pierce, Tattnall, Toombs, Ware and Wayne counties, Georgia Perinatal Health Partners, founded in 2001, is a voluntary association of health and human service providers who commit time, attention, and fiscal resources to improving perinatal health outcomes in its service area. The partnership is a product of collaboration between Savannah's East Health District and Brunswick's Coastal Health District to develop a Southeast Regional Perinatal Health strategic plan. The network combines in-home case management with nursing assessment and care coordination for high-risk pregnant women and their infants. The network currently operates in 10 of the district's 16 counties and collaborates with more than 72 active partners, including public and private providers, such as obstetricians, pediatricians, birthing hospitals, public health and community agencies. From 2003 to 2004, Perinatal Health Partners staff made more than 2,400 home visits to Southeast Georgia women, and the average weight of Perinatal Health Partners infants was more than 35 percent greater than the average birth weight of infants prior to the formation of network.
Southeast Health District 9-2 1115 Church Street, Suite A Waycross, GA 31501 Greta O'Steen 912-338-5916 gdosteen@gdph.state.ga.us www.health.state.ga.us/regional/southeast/index.asp
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Walk-A-Weigh Richmond County Extension Service, Richmond County, Georgia Walk-A-Weigh is an eight-week educational weight-reduction program designed to promote healthy life-styles. The programs include many topics: reducing fats and sugars in recipes, understanding the nutrition label, substituting herbs and spices for salt, and learning that regular physical activity decreases weight and improves the cardiovascular system. Nine participants lost a total of 53 pounds, including one individual losing 21 pounds in the six week period. Previous to these classes they did not exercise at all. All participants indicated an increase of three to five daily servings of fruits, vegetables and grains.
Richmond County Extension Service 602 Greene Street Augusta, GA 30901 Betty English 706-821-2356 benglish@uga.edu www.county.ces.uga.edu/richmond/
Washington County Community Wellness Consortium, Taekwondo Program Washington County, Georgia The Washington County Community Wellness Consortium, a collaboration of agencies and health providers, has developed a small, multidisciplinary weight loss and fitness model program, the cornerstone of which is martial art taekwondo. This model program began July 2005, with a small grant from Georgia Southern University's Intellectual Capital Partnership Program. All program participants receive regular nutrition education and food preparation demonstrations provided by the Washington County Extension Service. Children are required to attend 21 classes in an eight-week cycle (or three classes per week), leading to earning a series of belts. At specific intervals, children's physical and psychosocial progress is assessed. Interval successes and instructor feedback motivates children and families to continue their individual plans.
Washington County Community Wellness Consortium Hospital Authority of Washington County, Inc. 610 Sparta Road P.O. Box 636 Sandersville, GA 31082 Tara Broxton 478-240-2391 tbroxton@sandersville.net
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West Georgia Chronic Disease Initiative Carroll, Haralson and Heard counties, Georgia The West Georgia Chronic Disease Initiative is a community-based treatment, management, and prevention program formed in 2001 as a broad partnership with more than 70 local participants. The initiative was prompted in part by the results of two community health assessments which indicated a prevalence of risk factors associated with diabetes and hypertension. The West Georgia Chronic Disease initiative serves individuals who suffer from diabetes, hypertension, asthma or cardio-pulmonary disease, or who are at risk for these diseases. The program places a special emphasis on low-income, uninsured, and underserved individuals, including the community's growing minority populations.
Tanner Medical Foundation 99 Doctor's Drive Carrollton, GA 30117 Kristie Dunson 770-836-9282 kdunson@tanner.org www.tanner.org
Wilkes Wild about Wellness Wilkes County, Georgia Wilkes Wild about Wellness is a community-based approach to nutrition intervention through partnerships with community institutions, organizations, and leaders. Five basic steps are followed: assess the community, establish your key contacts, build a network, implement the program, stay connected and evaluate. Wellness First is a nutrition education program for adults and teens developed to improve health and decrease risk of chronic diseases, not necessarily for weight loss. Activities include community, employee, and student walking clubs.
University of Georgia-Medical College of Georgia Collaborative 280 Dawson Hall Athens, GA 30608 Rebecca M. Mullis 706-542-4875 rmm@fcs.uga.edu www.fcs.uga.edu/washingtonwilkes/
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NATIONAL Healthy Communities of Louisiana/The Obesity Project Health Education Research and Prevention Center Grambling, Louisiana In 2004, the Grambling Health Education Research and Prevention Center developed a comprehensive health education and screening program to increase their primarily African American population's knowledge of health risk factors through an intensive faith-based, family, community and school-based health literacy program. This initiative has resulted in the creation of a variety of culturally-sensitive health education and outreach programs focused on diabetes, cardiovascular disease and obesity.
Health Education Research and Prevention Center City of Grambling Grambling, Louisiana 1732 Marsalis St Arcadia, LA 71001 Calvin R. Young, Program Director 318-247-0011 cry66@hotmail.com
Kentucky River Health Network Seven rural counties in Kentucky (Lee, Owsley, Jackson, Powell, Wolfe, Estill and Breathitt counties) The Kentucky River Health Network's mission is to improve access to preventive care services for the underinsured and uninsured people in their area. These services include mammography and prostate screening, development of hepatitis screening services, transportation services, and continuing education for health care providers, and public awareness programs. Long-term goals include expanding to six other counties focusing on the education of children and students throughout the region as well as continuing education for health care providers.
Foothills Community Action Partnership 128 Kentucky Avenue Irvine, KY 40336 John Esford 606-723-2115 x8210 jisfort@lourdes-pad.org www.lourdes-pad.org
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Prenatal Plus Program Statewide, Colorado The Prenatal Plus Program is a Medicaid funded program that provides care coordination, mental health services, and nutrition services to high-risk pregnant women in Colorado. A multidisciplinary Prenatal Plus team consists of a care coordinator, a registered dietitian, and a mental health professional that complement the medical component of prenatal care by addressing the lifestyle and behavioral characteristics that affect birth outcomes. Prenatal Plus services are tailored to the unique risk factors and needs of high-risk pregnant women through a client-centered model of care.
Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment Prenatal Plus Program Prevention Services Division Women's Health Unit - A5 4300 Cherry Creek Drive South Denver, CO 80246 303-692-2495 www.cdphe.state.co.us/pp/womens/prenatalplus.asp
Scott County Child Health Initiative Scott County, Tennessee The Scott County Child Health Initiative provides preventive education related to wellchild screenings and conducts these screenings in local elementary schools. Complete well-child screenings are provided to students in grades first through third. These screenings are a mandatory component for school attendance in these designated grades. Parents have the choice of receiving the screening through the school-based clinics or with their private physicians. A home visitation/education component of the program targets children listed on TennCare delinquency lists, ages birth to 21 years. Community health workers provide in-home and telephone education related to wellchild screenings, EPSDT Health Check Services, immunizations and WIC.
Scott County Health Department Kerry Byrd-Hamby, Nursing Supervisor P. O. Box 88 344 Court Street Huntsville, TN 37756-0088 423-663-2445 Kerri.byrd-hamby@state.tn.us
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West Kentucky Dental Health Project 12 counties in rural western Kentucky The West Kentucky Dental Health Project is a collaborative community-driven project that aims to build an infrastructure in 12 counties in rural western Kentucky to address early childhood dental caries. The project targets children and families of the WIC program, Head Start and first and second graders through educational programming, preventive projects and activities to increase treatment. Murray State University Purchase AHEC 225 Wells Hall Murray, KY 42071 Loretta Maldaner 270-762-4123 Loretta.maldaner@murraystate.edu www.murraystate.edu
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Goal 3:
Support Practical Integration of technology to increase the efficiency and effectiveness of health services
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Goal 3: Support practical integration of technology to increase the efficiency and effectiveness of health services.
Priority Action 3. a: Improve clinical outcomes by encouraging local communities to develop long-term plans based on the Georgia Health Information Technology and Transparency Advisory Board's standards for expanding and maintaining the use of health information technology
Priority Action 3. b: Increase utilization of telemedicine by educating providers and supporting communities in expanding connectivity and other health information technology infrastructure
The following are community projects and best practices that showcase initiatives in Georgia and across the nation. These examples can be used as resources for communities that want to integrate technology into their services.
GEORGIA Georgia Cancer Quality Information Exchange Pilot projects in progress in Savannah and Rome, Georgia The Georgia Cancer Coalition created the Georgia Cancer Quality Information Exchange to establish systems, procedures, infrastructure and resources to gather and aggregate all of the data necessary to measure the 52 cancer-related metrics recommended in a 2005 Institute of Medicine study.
Georgia Cancer Coalition 50 Hurt Plaza, Suite 700 Atlanta, GA 30303 Angie Patterson, COO 404-584-7720 apatterson@georgiacaner.org www.georgiacancer.org
Georgia Telemedicine Program Savannah, Georgia and Statewide The Georgia Telemedicine Program offers almost 50 sites in Georgia from which patients can access advanced medical care without traveling more than 30 miles. It currently facilitates 150 consultations per month (excluding teleradiology), providing access to 60 specialists in 40 fields.
The program provides a collaborative learning opportunity between the presenting clinician and specialist while allowing patients to maintain their relationship with their local primary care provider. It has proven to expedite care, screening, diagnosis and treatment and has addressed major needs such as diabetes education, nutrition counseling, stress testing, perinatal level 2 ultrasounds, pediatric genetics, and child, adult and geriatric psychiatry.
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Using high-speed phone lines, computer equipment, specialized medical cameras and encryption technology, the Telemedicine Program makes it possible to send images, medical records and data rapidly and securely, and facilitates live video encounters between patients and remote specialists. It also can be used to access medical grand rounds, Continuing Medical Education activities and staff training opportunities remotely.
Georgia Telemedicine Program 8001 Chatham Center Drive, Suite 100 Savannah, GA 31405 Paula Guy, Manager 912-550-9025 paula.guy@wellpoint.com
Pathways Community Network Four states including Georgia Pathways supports human services providers with a variety of tools that encourage collaboration, reduce costs and increase impact so more people find the path to success.
The Pathways Compass Community Information Sharing System features the following components:
Comprehensive Demographic Information, Services History Shelter Bed Reservations, Personal Health Record Electronic Medical Referral, Benefits Eligibility Wizard Housing and Urban Development-compliant Homeless Management Information
System, Residence History Income History, Case Management,Veterans Information, Education History
Communities in four states use Pathways Compass to coordinate care for families and individuals in crisis. The state of Georgia uses Pathways Compass for its Homeless Management Information System (HMIS).
Pathways Community Network 2310 Parklake Dr NE Ste 540 Atlanta, GA 30345 William Matson, Executive Director 866-818-1032 william.matson@pcni.org www.pcni.org
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NATIONAL California Regional Health Information Organization State of California California Regional Health Information Organization is a statewide collaborative initiative to improve the safety, quality and efficiency of health care through the use of information technology and the secure exchange of health information. It brings together health plans, providers, hospitals, consumers, public agencies, researchers, policy leaders, and others. Working groups include: Clinical and Privacy, Technology, and Regional Efforts.
CalRHIO 526 Second Street San Francisco, CA 94107 Donald L. Holmquest, MD, PhD, JD Chief Executive Officer 415-537-6944 or 415-537-6939 dholmquest@calrhio.org info@calrhio.org www.calrhio.org
HealthBridge Greater Cincinnati tri-state area HealthBridge is a not-for-profit health information exchange serving the Greater Cincinnati tri-state area. Its mission is to improve the quality and efficiency of health care in the community. It serves as a third party working with all participating health care stakeholders to facilitate creation of an integrated and interoperable community health care system, including the adoption of community standard technologies and work processes. HealthBridge provides access to over 60 hospital-based critical care systems including radiology images, fetal heart monitoring, hospital-based electronic medical records and chart completion; and operates a community-based secure clinical messaging system delivering over 1.4 million results (laboratory, radiology, transcription and ADT) to over 4,000 physicians each month.
Healthbridge is managed with a strong business model. It is a subscription-based service and fees are based on the size of the provider organization. The organization does not rely upon grant money to fund its efforts. Resources are tightly managed at the organization, and new projects are only initiated if there is a long term commitment and if the project will help reduce costs, improve efficiency and benefit the community. (Healthbridge has expanded into Kentucky and Indiana with 21 hospitals currently participating across the three states.)
HealthBridge 11300 Cornell Park Drive, Suite 360 Cincinnati, OH 45242 Bob Regan 513-469-7222 ext 19
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info@healthbridge.org www.healthbridge.org
Northern Sierra Rural Health Network Technology Services Center Regional Northern California The Northern Sierra Rural Health Network Technology Services Center supports and expands the use of technology by rural health providers in the northeastern corner of California. It provides a technical support program for rural providers with a "help desk" function and field support; a high-speed network that offers internet, data, video and voice services over an IP-based network; and the NSRHN Bridge, which allows many sites to participate in video conferencing from their rural locations. Since ISDN services are not available in all areas, T1 lines are installed from the rural sites to the network so that the bridge can join them with ISDN, IP or other T1 sites. The NSRHN Bridge currently hosts up to 100 video events per month including clinical specialty consults; CME events; support group meetings; technology trainings; staff meetings and supervision; workforce training; board meetings; and community education.
Northern Sierra Rural Health Network Technology Services Center 1900 Churn Creek Rd., Suite 208 Redding, CA 96002 530-722-1156 info@nsrhn.org www.nsrhn.org
The Jesse Tree Galveston, Texas The goal of the Jesse Tree is to help all members of the community locate and utilize available services, to advocate for new or expanded services, and to provide tools, resources, and in-service training to improve existing services. The Jesse Tree maintains an updated computerized directory of hundreds of services available to the community. The Galveston Safety Net is the online, World Wide Web version of this information. Twice a year The Jesse Tree Journal is published and over 40,000 copies are distributed across the county. The Jesse Tree has developed The Jesse Tree WebCare application that provides agencies in a collaborative environment a way to track the clients and services provided by their own agency while sharing information about referrals with other agencies in the collaborative. It is based on the concept of holistic solutions to client problems. Because of the collaborative nature, where one agency may not have a way to address all the needs of a client, they can share that responsibility with other agencies that do have the capability. The Jesse Tree WebCare application is being made available to other communities who want to benefit from this low-cost, high-value tool and are interested in helping set its future direction. A demonstration system is available for viewing at http://demo.web-care.org/. It is composed of more than 4,000 fictitious clients.
The Jesse Tree
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2622 Market Street Galveston, TX 77550 Ted Hanley, Director 877-621-2455 jessetree@aol.com www.jessetree.net
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Goal 4:
Engage and Enable Communities in Action
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Goal 4: Engage and enable communities in action
Priority Action 4. a: Facilitate the creation and expansion of multi-county health collaborations in rural communities and provide external, objective technical support to those communities to improve health outcomes
Priority Action 4. b: Improve collaborative, community-based health planning (using relevant health data) that is an integral part of local and/or regional economic development plans
The following are community projects and best practices that showcase initiatives in Georgia and across the nation. These examples are resources for communities that want to build collaboratives to address health needs.
GEORGIA East Georgia Health Cooperative, Inc. Serves an 11 County Area in East Central Georgia East Georgia Health Cooperative, Inc. is an integrated network of rural providers delivering quality, low-cost primary and specialty care within local communities, and supported where appropriate by links with outside suppliers such as urban tertiary centers. The mission for East Georgia Health Cooperative, Inc. is to enhance the access, scope and viability of health care services in an eleven-county region of East Central Georgia. Membership includes four hospitals, three community health centers, rural health clinics, and affiliated physicians. The Cooperative members pool resources and share opportunities, allowing local delivery of services and specialists. By increasing the availability of services within communities, they broaden the access of those services among an historically underserved population.
East Georgia Health Cooperative, Inc. 543 West Church Street Swainsboro, GA 30401 Catherine Liemohn 478-289-6110 liemohn@bellsouth.net www.eghealthcoop.org
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Hall County HealthShare Project Hall County, Georgia The HealthShare project was initiated by representatives from local health care and social services providers to help the community understand the needs of the uninsured people in Hall County. They seek to improve community health by: researching and telling the story of how community organizations are attempting to meet the health care needs of low-income people who are uninsured; educating the community and business leaders on issues related to indigent care; educating consumers about how to access health care services in the most effective and productive ways possible; securing additional funding from government and philanthropic resources to support indigent health care; and promoting access to insurance and coverage through employers.
The Hall County HealthShare Project The Longstreet Clinic, P.C. Corporate Offices 725 Jesse Jewell Parkway Gainesville, GA 30501 Mimi Collins, Chairperson 770-718-1122 ext. 6590 mimi.collins@longstreetclinic.com www.longstreetclinic.com
Lowndes County Partnership for Health, Inc. Lowndes County, Georgia The Lowndes County Partnership for Health, Inc. represents a grassroots collaborative effort bringing together health providers, educators, public health, community leaders, businesses and the faith community for the purpose of evaluating the health needs of the county and creating cost efficient solutions. Created to help prevent illness, disease and the problems associated with chronic health problems, growth has been rapid for the Partnership. Currently, the Partnership's staff and volunteers are implementing comprehensive wellness programs in 16 local businesses and 20 local churches affecting over 15,000 individuals on a monthly basis.
Lowndes County Partnership for Health, Inc. 100 Jackson St. Valdosta, GA 31601 John Sparks, Executive Director 229-245-0020 lcph@bellsouth.net www.lcpfh.org
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Northwest Georgia Health Care Partnership Whitfield and Murray Counties, Georgia The Northwest Georgia Health Care Partnership is a not-for-profit, tax-exempt organization serving Murray and Whitfield Counties since 1992. The Health Care Partnership views itself as going beyond programming and research to include roles of coach, catalyst, convener and facilitator. The partnership's mission is to develop and support cooperation and collaboration among health care providers, business, industry, payers, consumers, social organizations, government, educators and the community for the purpose of improving the health of all through the efficient, effective, and caring use of resources. Northwest Georgia Health Care Partnership Post Office Box 182 Dalton, GA 30722 Nancy Kennedy, Executive Director 706-272-6663 nkennedy@hhcs.org www.hhsc.org
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NATIONAL Access Health for Small Business Muskegon County, Michigan Access Health, a program developed by Muskegon County Health Project, is an innovative approach to the challenge of providing health coverage to uninsured working families in Muskegon County. More than 400 local small businesses and 1,500 people annually participate in this unique effort aimed at helping people and business get access to affordable coverage. This unique, three-share model distributes the benefit cost equally between employer, employee and the community, enabling small and midsized businesses to provide a comprehensive mainstream benefit plan that includes local physician services, inpatient hospitalization, outpatient services, emergency services, behavioral health, prescription drugs (formulary), diagnostic lab and x-rays, home health and hospice care. A shining example of a community-based solution to a national problem, the Health Project, through its Community Health Ventures affiliate, is helping other communities across the nation develop similar programs and is providing information to the U.S. Congress about the role of models of this type in addressing the needs of America's uninsured.
Muskegon Community Health Project 565 W. Western Ave. Muskegon, MI 49440 Vondie Woodberry, Executive Director 231-728-3201 info@mchp.org www.mchp.org
CHOICE Rural Health Network Olympia, Washington CHOICE began as a seven-hospital response to the threat of a hostile takeover by a for-profit hospital and has transformed into a vehicle, which chaperones clients with complex needs through systems of care and coverage they characteristically have trouble navigating. Using a variety of funding sources including membership dues and fees, Medicaid match, federal grant programs and private foundation grant programs, CHOICE has put together programs to serve 17,000 people.
CHOICE Regional Health Network 2409 Pacific Ave SE Olympia, WA 98501 Kristen West, Executive Director 800-981-2123 info@crhn.org www.crhn.org
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Coordinated Care Network Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Coordinated Care Network is a community-based organization founded in 1996 that provides case management and 340-B pharmacy services to underserved populations in 13 counties across southwestern Pennsylvania. Coordinated Care Network's mission is to reduce "system" costs through its case management and prescription discount programs, and in the process, generate sufficient earned income to finance health care for its uninsured population. Coordinated Care Network is comprised of 13 non-profit member agencies that provide medical, social and behavioral health services to vulnerable populations through 194 programs at 79 sites. Creation of CCN was initially funded by 10 local and two national foundations, and subsequently, funded through the federal Community Access Program recently renamed Healthy Communities Access Program. Their services include: preventive case management services, and 340-B physician dispensing and mail order services, 340-B poly-pharmacy member case management services.
Coordinated Care Network 300 Penn Center Boulevard Suite 505 Pittsburgh, PA 15235 Jeffery S. Palmer, President 412-349-6300 www.jspalmer@coordinatedcarenetwork.org www.coordinatedcarenetwork.org
General Assistance Medical Program Milwaukee, Wisconsin A unique partnership of local, state, and federal government, county public health, hospitals, physicians, clinics and more General Assistance Medical Program associates turned a $15.6 million local tax into $49.4 million in program funding. Twenty-seven thousand of Milwaukee's uninsured are served each year by a broader, more organized safety net. In this program, participating providers both give and receive; they bear risk for their patients needs when resources run out, but receive a new funding stream to serve program enrollees.
General Assistance Medical Program 1220 West Vliet Milwaukee, Wisconsin Chris Collentine, Program Director 414-289-6621 www.county.milwaukee.gov
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Ohio State Health Network Columbus, Ohio Ohio State Health Network is a membership organization that provides cost savings solutions; education and professional networking opportunities to identify and/or develop best practices. Ohio State Health Network is a 501 (c ) 3 comprised of one health system, six hospitals and two health care organizations. The members include: Barnesville Hospital, Bucyrus Community Hospital, Madison County Hospital, Mary Rutan Hospital, Mercer County Community Hospital, The Ohio State University Healthsystem, Wyandot Memorial Hospital, and Family Health Care, Inc. Services focus on three main areas: clinical service improvement, operational improvement and community health improvement.
Ohio State Health Network 660 Ackerman Road, Ste. 601 P.O. Box 183110 Columbus, OH 43218-3110 Joanne Ort, Executive Director 614-293-3785 joann.ort@osumc.edu www.oshn.org
Project Access Wichita, Kansas Led by one key philanthropically-minded, entrepreneurial physician, local leaders carefully copied a program from a similar community to provide primary and specialty care to low-income uninsured residents. The program uses less than $180,000 in administrative costs per year to leverage $5 million in donated services. To date, 5,000 people have been served. Physicians, hospitals, and pharmacies donate care and services, and local government, the United Way and a local foundation support the program financially. Project Access is a community-based, physician-led initiative to expand access to medical services for low-income, uninsured residents of Sedgwick County, Kansas. Project Access is a project of the Central Plains Regional Health Care Foundation in partnership with the Medical Society of Sedgwick County.
Project Access 1102 S. Hillside Wichita, KS 67211 Anne Nelson, COO 316-688-0600 annenelson@projectaccess.net www.projectaccess.net
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Rural Wisconsin Health Cooperative Sauk City, Wisconsin The Rural Wisconsin Health Cooperative supports and enhances rural health and quality of care. Rural Wisconsin Health Cooperative is a strong, innovative and mutually supportive network of hospitals with diversified services that combine their strengths to meet local community health needs through advocacy and high value products and services. The Rural Wisconsin Health Cooperative, begun in 1979, supports and enhances rural health and quality of care. The Rural Wisconsin Health Cooperative is owned and operated by 31, rural acute, general medical-surgical hospitals. Rural Wisconsin Health Cooperative has received national recognition as one of the country's earliest and most successful models for networking among rural hospitals. Rural Wisconsin Health Cooperative serves rural Wisconsin hospitals in three basic ways: (1) local and national advocacy for rural health; (2) clinical/management products and services tailored to the needs of individual members; and (3) collaborative managed care contracting. The Rural Wisconsin Health Cooperative also provides technical assistance and training to member and nonmembers, in and outside of Wisconsin. Rural Wisconsin Health Cooperative 880 Independence Lane, P. O. Box 490 Sauk City, WI 53583 Tim Size, Executive Director 608-643-2343 timsize@rwhc.com www.rwhc.com
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Summary
Through community engagement and facilitation, the State Office of Rural Health developed the 2007 Georgia Rural Health Plan. As a reference document, the plan profiles what currently exists, identifies what can be done to improve rural health in Georgia, and provides resources and information to assist communities in moving forward.
Georgia's rural population suffers disproportionately from the root causes of poor health: lower educational attainment, lower income, and reduced access to a usual source of care. As a consequence, rural Georgia faces challenges in the five disease areas the 2007 Georgia Rural Health Plan stakeholder group chose to focus on: cardiovascular disease, obesity, diabetes, birth outcomes, and cancer. Rural Georgia leads the state in morbidity and mortality rates for all of the selected diseases.
Rural Georgia also faces great challenges in providing resources to address the identified problems. Georgia's physician and specialist workforce is concentrated in urban areas. Nursing shortages are also more pronounced in rural areas. Rural counties are home to many health professional shortage areas. Rural Georgians are disproportionately older than their urban counterparts, and the aging of the population will affect rural Georgia first. Funding for the long-term care of older rural Georgians currently supports more expensive institutional care.
For the past several years, Georgia has been a national leader in addressing rural health issues. The State Office of Rural Health continued this leadership role by embarking on a planning process that brought together stakeholders from around the state to share their collective wisdom about the issues, the implications, and effective strategies for addressing the problems of rural Georgia. The stakeholders' planning process resulted in a vision for rural health in Georgia, which was adopted by State Office of Rural Health and its partners. That vision, "Communities working collaboratively to improve the health of rural Georgians," guided the process and is the lynchpin for this plan. This statewide group adopted four goals and developed priority actions for implementing the goals.
Stakeholders involved in the development of this plan also identified community and national practices and other information resources for communities to use as they work toward implementing their priority actions. As it has in the past, rural Georgia can harness the power of community and community networks to address the problems of disparity, disease prevalence, and workforce. By adapting best practices in use across Georgia and nationally, Georgia's rural communities will continue to serve as national models for community health improvement.
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Appendices
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Appendix A - Planning Committee
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2007 GEORGIA RURAL HEALTH PLAN PLANNING COMMITTEE
Ann Addison
Chief Executive Officer Primary Care of Southwest Georgia Blakely
Sonia Alvarez Robinson
Strategic Resource Development Georgia Division of Public Health Atlanta
Tina Anderson Smith
Senior Research Associate Georgia Health Policy Center Atlanta
Carla Belcher
Chief Executive Officer Community Health Care Systems Wrightsville
Kitty Bishop
Assistant Director, Nursing and Clinical Services Southwest Georgia Public Health Albany
O.J. Booker
Chief Executive Officer Monroe County Hospital Forsyth
Tony Brown
Deputy Director State Office of Rural Health Cordele
Valerie Buchanan
Regional Risk Manager/Director of Safety ResCare - Southern Region Albany
H.D Cannington
Health care Consultant Dublin
Katherine Cummings
Director Georgia Rural Health Association Sandersville
Greg Dent
Executive Director Community Health Works Forsyth
Kay Floyd
Director of Operation Community Health Works Forsyth
Paula Guy
Director State Telemedicine Program Waycross
Duane Kavka
Executive Director Georgia Association for Primary Health Care Atlanta
Susan Knox
Health care Consultant Dublin
Denise Kornegay
Program Director State AHEC Centers Augusta
Karen Minyard
Executive Director Georgia Health Policy Center Atlanta
Erin Mundy
Medical Clerkship Coordinator Georgia Statewide AHEC Network Augusta
Vi Naylor
Executive Vice President Georgia Hospital Association Marietta
Gary Nelson
President
Healthcare Georgia Foundation Atlanta
Charles Owens
Executive Director State Office of Rural Health Cordele
Rhett Partin
Executive Director Center for Rural Health Georgia Hospital Association Marietta
Nancy Peed
Administrator and Chief Executive Officer Peach Regional Medical Center Fort Valley
Ben Robinson
Director Georgia Board for Physician Workforce State Medical Education Board Atlanta
Lisa Marie Shekell
Deputy Director of Communications, Georgia Department of Community Health Atlanta
Janice Sherman
Director, Community Development and Outreach Georgia Association of Primary Health Blakely
Stuart Tedders
Associate Professor Georgia Southern University Rural Health Research Center Statesboro
Patsy Whaley
Director, Hospital Services State Office of Rural Health Cordele
Kathy Whitmire
Managing Director Hometown Health Cumming
Stacey Willocks
Research Associate
Georgia Health Policy Center Atlanta
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Appendix B - Resources
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GEORGIA
The following Georgia agencies and organizations provide a wide-range of resources on rural health.
Area Health Education Centers A partnership coordinated between Medical College of Georgia and Mercer University School of Medicine, the Georgia Statewide Area Health Education Centers Network is a complex, multi-disciplinary effort which responds to the problems of health professionals supply and distribution in rural and underserved areas of the state. http://www.mcg.edu/AHEC/
Association of County Commissioners of Georgia The Association of County Commissioners of Georgia is a nonprofit instrumentality of Georgia's county governments. Association of County Commissioners of Georgia serves as the consensus building, training, and legislative organization for all 159 county governments in the state. It is the mission of the Association of County Commissioners of Georgia to enhance the role, stature and responsiveness of county government in Georgia. With this primary charge, Association of County Commissioners of Georgia works to ensure that the counties can provide the necessary leadership, services and programs to meet the health, safety and welfare needs of their citizens. http://www.accg.org/
Commission on Men's Health, Georgia Department of Community Health, Office of Health Improvement The Georgia Commission on Men's Health was created to address the ongoing, increasing and predominantly silent crisis in the health and well-being of Georgia men. Due to a lack of awareness, poor health education, and culturally induced behavior patterns in their work and personal lives, men's health and well-being are deteriorating steadily. The commission's goal is to be a catalyst to promote and improve the quality of the physical, social and mental health of men in the state of Georgia. http://dch.georgia.gov/00/channel_title/0,2094,31446711_40095489,00.html
Division of Aging Services, Georgia Department of Human Resources The Georgia Division of Aging Services administers a statewide system of services for senior citizens, their families and caregivers. The division works with other agencies focusing on aging and organizations to effectively and efficiently respond to the needs of elderly Georgians. Division of Aging Services meets the challenge of Georgia's growing older population through continued service improvement and innovation. http://aging.dhr.georgia.gov/portal/site/DHR-DAS/
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Division of Mental Health, Developmental Disabilities and Addictive Diseases, Georgia Department of Human Resources The Division of Mental Health, Developmental Disabilities and Addictive Diseases provides treatment and support services to people with mental illnesses and addictive diseases, and support to people with mental retardation and related developmental disabilities. It serves people of all ages with the most severe and likely to be long-term conditions. The division also funds evidenced-based prevention services aimed at reducing substance abuse and related problems. http://mhddad.dhr.georgia.gov/portal/site/DHR-MHDDAD/
Division of Public Health, Georgia Department of Human Resources The Division of Public Health is the lead agency of the state of Georgia in charge of the ultimate responsibility for the health of communities and the entire population. The division has a commitment to improving health status through community leadership, provide expertise in health information and surveillance, and assure a safer environment. The division is responsive to public health needs, valued for its expertise and innovation, dedicated to excellence, and known for promoting healthy communities through partnerships. http://health.state.ga.us/
Family Connection Partnership Family Connection Partnership is a public/private partnership created by the State of Georgia and private sector funds. Family Connection Partnership assists communities in addressing the serious challenges facing Georgia's children and families and serves as a resource to state agencies across Georgia that work to improve the conditions of children and families. http://www.gafcp.org/
Georgia Alliance of Community Hospitals The Georgia Alliance of Community Hospitals works for the interests of more than 60 community not-for-profit hospitals across the state of Georgia. Its main role is to push for the enactment of sound laws, rules and regulations affecting community hospitals. The Alliance conducts and disseminates research on important health care issues, and shares ideas that improve Georgia's health care delivery systems. http://www.ciclt.net/gach/
Georgia Association for Primary Health Care Georgia Association for Primary Health Care's mission is to improve access to comprehensive primary health care services for all medically underserved Georgians and to support the continued development and expansion of community-based health center practice systems throughout the state. http://www.gaphc.org/
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Georgia Board for Physician Workforce The Georgia Board for Physician Workforce monitors changes in Georgia's physician workforce with emphasis on the geographic distribution of physicians in the state. Reports available on their Web site help to identify areas of need, monitor the supply and distribution of practicing physicians in Georgia, plan for health services, determine funding for residency programs; and locate facilities. http://mdworkforce.mercer.edu/ http://dch.georgia.gov/00/channel_title/0,2094,31446711_32228166,00.html
Georgia Cancer Coalition The mission of the Georgia Cancer Coalition is to reduce the number of cancer deaths in the state. In so doing, Georgia intends to become a national leader in cancer control by accelerating prevention, early detection, treatment and research. All of the coalition's activities, programs, and budget have been organized around five goals: 1) Prevent cancer and detect existing cancers earlier. 2) Improve access to quality care for all Georgians with cancer. 3) Save more lives in the future. 4) Train future cancer researchers and caregivers. 5) Realize economic benefits from eradicating cancer. http://www.georgiacancer.org/
Georgia Coalition for Physical Activity and Nutrition Georgia's Nutrition and Physical Activity Initiative, is a joint effort between the Division of Public Health and its partners, to prevent obesity and other chronic diseases through healthy eating and physical activity initiatives across a person's life span. The initiative focuses on the following major behaviors: breastfeeding, healthy eating, physical activity and reduced television/screen time in a variety of settings through education/skill building, policy and environmental approaches. http://health.state.ga.us/nutandpa/index.asp
Georgia Dental Association The Georgia Dental Association was established in 1859 to promote the highest professional and ethical standards of oral health care. Georgia Dental Association empowers individual dentists to be collectively effective with issues that confront them and serves as an advocate for the advancement of the profession. http://www.gadental.org
Georgia Department of Community Affairs The Georgia Department of Community Affairs serves as a state-level advocate for local governments. Georgia Department of Community Affairs operates a host of state and federal grant programs; serves as the state's lead agency in housing finance and development; promulgates building codes to be adopted by local governments; provides comprehensive planning, technical and research assistance to local governments; and serves as the lead agency for the state's solid waste reduction efforts. http://www.dca.state.ga.us/
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Georgia Free Clinic Network The purpose of the Georgia Free Clinic Network is to establish a link between individuals, businesses and organizations that are assisting the growing population of people unable to afford health care. Georgia Free Clinic Network provides a central organization for sharing resources and knowledge to advance the movement of free medical services in the State of Georgia. http://www.gfcn.org/
Georgia Health Information Technology and Transparency Board On October 17, 2006, Governor Sonny Perdue issued an executive order creating the Health Information Technology and Transparency Advisory Board. The board will advise Department of Community Health on the best practices for encouraging the use of electronic health records and establishing a statewide strategy to enable health information to be readily available and transparent. Department of Community Heatlh goals for Health and Information Transparency and Technology in Georgia are to enable the understandable, universal, timely and secure communication of health information across the public and private sectors for the benefit of today's health care consumer. A Web site is being created to provide easy access to a number of health information technology resources. Content on this site is updated based on national, state and local Health and Information Transparency and Technology activities. http://dch.georgia.gov/00/channel_title/0,2094,31446711_59588545,00.html
Georgia Health Policy Center The Georgia Health Policy Center provides evidence-based research, program development and policy guidance locally, statewide, and nationally to improve health status at the community level. The center conducts, analyzes and disseminates qualitative and quantitative findings to connect decision makers with the objective research and guidance needed to make informed decisions about health policy and programs. http://aysps.gsu.edu/ghpc/
Georgia Hospital Association, Center for Rural Health As part of the Georgia Hospital Association , the Center for Rural Health is organized as a not-for-profit association exclusively for charitable, scientific, and educational purposes and to develop policies and positions to benefit rural health in the state of Georgia. The center is organized through the Georgia Hospital Association Research and Education Foundation http://www.gha.org/pha/ruralhealth/index.asp
Georgia Medical Care Foundation Serving as Georgia's Quality Improvement Organization the Georgia Medical Care Foundation assists physician offices, hospitals, nursing homes and home health agencies in adopting and implementing systems, redesigning processes and developing organizational cultures to accelerate the rate of quality improvement. A key strategy
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involves forming partnerships with other professional organizations to extend their reach and broaden their effectiveness. http://www.gmcf.org
Georgia Public Health Association The Georgia Public Health Association is a non-profit corporation organized for the purpose of promoting the public and personal health of the citizens of Georgia. It provides opportunities for networking with other public health professionals, attending continuing education seminars and advocating for public health issues concerning Georgians. http://www.gapha.org/
Georgia Rural Health Association The Georgia Rural Health Association, established in 1981, is a non-profit network of individuals and organizations united by a commitment to improve health and health care for rural Georgians. The associaiton:
1) Promotes rural health as a distinct concern in Georgia 2) Serves as advocates for rural health by promoting improved health status and an improved health care system for rural Georgians 3) Encourages the development of appropriate health care resources for residents of rural Georgia. http://www.garuralhealth.org/
Georgia Volunteer Clinic Program The Georgia Volunteer Clinic Program is available to communities to assist volunteer health care professionals with clinic management and projects, including health care provider recruitment, contracting for sovereign immunity protection, administering quality assurance review, and ensuring that providers have the proper licenses. Volunteer clinic grant funding is designated to increase the number of patients receiving medical care through volunteer clinics. In 2006, the State Office of Rural Health provided $580,000 to support the development of 11 of the 55 volunteer clinics participating in Georgia's Volunteer Clinic Program. http://www.dch.ga.gov
Healthcare Georgia Foundation Healthcare Georgia Foundation is a statewide, private, independent foundation whose mission is to advance the health of all Georgians and to expand access to affordable, quality health care for underserved individuals and communities. Within this broad, statewide focus, the specific goals of the foundation are to: protect and promote the health of individuals, families and communities; improve the availability, quality, appropriateness and financing of health care services; and integrate and coordinate efforts to improve health and health care services. http://healthcaregeorgia.org/
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HomeTown Health, LLC HomeTown Health, LLC is an organization of rural and small hospitals, located throughout the state of Georgia, who collectively pursue ways to help hospitals survive in this environment of tremendous budget cuts from the state and federal level. HomeTown Health University offers courses that assist practitioners in growing professionally as well as personally in their health care careers. http://www.hometownhealthonline.com
International Capital Partnership Program Health Professionals Initiative The University System of Georgia administers the Intellectual Capital Partnership Program which is targeted toward non-traditional students seeking a second career in health care as well as, current college students not enrolled in health care courses or degree programs. The Health Professionals Initiative matches private sector health care providers with University System colleges and universities and provides accelerated education to produce graduates in the fields of nursing, medical technology and pharmacy. http://www.icapp.org
Live Healthy Georgia Campaign In an effort to help the people of Georgia live healthier lives and to reduce the burden of chronic disease and other illnesses, Governor Perdue and the Georgia Department of Human Resources joined forces by launching the Live Healthy Georgia campaign. The Live Healthy Georgia Campaign serves as the umbrella for an outreach initiative that aims to raise awareness about the risk factors associated with chronic diseases and to provide Georgians with information about ways to live healthier, and reduce their risk of developing chronic diseases. http://www.livehealthygeorgia.org/
Medical Association of Georgia The Medical Association of Georgia is an advocate and a partner in achieving the main goals of the association: to promote the science and art of medicine and the betterment of public health. Its mission is to enhance patient care and the health of the public by advancing the art and science of medicine and by representing physicians and patients in policy-making processes. http://www.mag.org
Office of Women's Health, Georgia Department of Human Resources, Division of Public Health The mission of the Office of Women's Health is to provide leadership and resources to communities in the development, use and continuous improvement of a continuum of health care that supports and improves the quality of life for women and their families. The office's goals are to increase knowledge of services available and access to appropriate, quality care to women and their families. http://health.state.ga.us/programs/women/index.asp
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Office of Minority Health, Georgia Department of Community Health The Office of Minority Health helps minority communities reach a high level of health and wellness. It works to eliminate the discrepancy in health status between minority and non-minority populations in Georgia. Its activities are organized around four key areas: identify, assess and analyze issues related to the health of minority populations; work with public and private organizations to address specific minority community health needs; monitor state programs, policies and procedures to assure that they are inclusive and responsive to minority community health needs and; facilitate the development and implementation of research enterprises and scientific investigations to produce minority-specific findings. http://dch.georgia.gov/00/channel_title/0,2094,31446711_40827916,00.html
OneGeorgia Authority The OneGeorgia Authority utilizes one third of the state's tobacco settlement to assist the state's most economically challenged areas. OneGeorgia's investments are targeted towards rural communities through a rural airport initiative, grants to improve rural broadband access, economic growth of rural businesses, loan guarantees for small businesses and entrepreneurs, an equity fund for rural infrastructure, an E-911 emergency services network, and a strategic industries loan fund. http://www.onegeorgia.org/
State Medical Education Board of Georgia The State Medical Education Board of Georgia was established in 1952 for a two-fold purpose: to provide an adequate supply of physicians in rural areas of the state; and to provide a program of aid to promising medical students who do not have the financial means to attend medical school. The board is instrumental in physician recruitment to rural and underserved Georgia communities. Each year, the board sponsors a Medical Fair where rural Georgia communities are invited to speak with physicians in training concerning future medical practice opportunities. 2006 http://smeb.georgia.gov/01/home/0,2197,1408609,00.html
State Office of Rural Health, Georgia Department of Community Health The State Office of Rural Health works to improve access to health care in rural and underserved areas and to reduce health status disparities. Its goals are to empower communities to strengthen and maintain the best possible health care using existing resources, provide up-to-date health systems information and technical assistance, build strong partnerships to meet local and regional needs, provide incentives to local areas to implement integrated service delivery systems, and to be the single point of contact for all regional issues related to heath care. http://dch.georgia.gov/00/channel_title/0,2094,31446711_32385451,00.html
Take Charge of Your Health for Older Adults, Georgia Statewide Take Charge of Your Health for Older Adults is focused on increasing physical activity as well as nutrition. Educational materials focus on correcting risk factors for poor nutrition in older adults and facilitating the voluntary adoption of eating behaviors that promote health and well-being for older adults. Responses to several measures
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significantly improved after the intervention. Participants in the intervention knew much more about daily required physical activity than they did before the intervention. Participants also reported an improved feeling of general health. http://www.organwiseguys.com/products/4003.asp
NATIONAL The following are a sample of national organizations with programs of interest to rural communities.
Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality National Resource Center for Health Information Technology This Academy Health Web site describes current AHRQ-funded Health Information Transparency and Technology projects in rural communities and lists HIT best practices. http://healthit.ahrq.gov/
American Project Access Network American Project Access Network is a national, nonprofit organization serving communities that utilize the Project Access system to coordinate physician charity care for low-income, uninsured people. Project Access provides an effective means to enhance access to care and improve the health of this population. American Project Access Network uses the Buncombe County Medical Society Project Access charity health care model developed in Asheville, North Carolina, and others that have been replicated from it, to help guide communities through their own transformational processes. More than 20 communities, with populations ranging in size from 22,000 to over one million have successfully adopted the Project Access model to their unique circumstances. http://www.apanonline.org/about/about.php
Bureau of Primary Health Care The mission of the Health Resources and Services Administration's Bureau of Primary Health Care is to increase access to comprehensive primary and preventive health care and to improve the health status of underserved and vulnerable populations. http://bphc.hrsa.gov/
Communities Joined in Action Communities Joined in Action is a group of community organizations, individuals and corporations concerned about improving the lives of the uninsured and underinsured in the face of today's health care crisis. This organization:
(1) Connects communities to affordable, value-added peer-to-peer technical assistance from other community members who have had similar challenges (2) Provides learning institutes and "how to" materials from leaders who have been successful (3) Supports communities in organizing events that generate political will and dramatic leaps in progress
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(4) Facilitates the development and growth of state or regional networks of local communities joined in action towards 100 percent Access and zero Disparities. www.cjaonline.net
Community Tool Box The Web site was developed by Kansas University to support work in promoting community health and development. The Tool Box provides over 6,000 pages of practical skill-building information on over 250 different topics. Topic sections include step-by-step instruction, examples, check-lists, and related resources. http://ctb.ku.edu/
E-Health Initiative The eHealth Initiative and its foundation are independent, non-profit, affiliated organizations whose missions are the same: to drive improvements in the quality, safety and efficiency of health care through information and information technology. http://www.ehealthinitiative.org
Farm Worker Health Services, Inc. Farm Worker Health Services Inc. offers health services to migrant workers along the eastern seaboard of the United States. Field staff move according to seasonal needs and in their own cars search for camp and individual locations of migrant and seasonal workers to determine direct or referred services. http://www.farmworkerhealth.org
Generation Fit/American Cancer Society Involves children in community service projects promoting physical activity and healthier eating. The program can be run by coaches, youth groups, or counselors with guidelines and materials provided in the Generation Fit Action Packet from American Cancer Society. http://www.cancer.org/docroot/PED/content/PED_1_5X_Generation_Fit.asp
Health Level Seven Health Level Seven is one of several American National Standards Institute -accredited Standards Developing Organizations operating in the health care arena. Most Standards Developing Organizations produce standards (sometimes called specifications or protocols) for a particular health care domain such as pharmacy, medical devices, imaging or insurance (claims processing) transactions. Health Level Seven's domain is clinical and administrative data. http://www.HL7.org
J-1 Visa Waiver Program The J-1 Visa Program is for foreign medical graduates who wish to pursue graduate medical training in the United States. The visa allows holders to remain in the U.S. until their studies are completed. At the completion of their studies, they are expected to return to their home countries for two years before applying for a permanent visa in the United States. A J-1 Visa Waiver waives the two year home residency requirement
111
and allows a physician to stay in the country to practice in a federally designated Health Professional Shortage Area or Medically Underserved Area if sponsored by an interested U.S. government agency. State government agencies may also sponsor J-1 physician waiver requests which are called Conrad State 30 programs. http://www.raconline.org/info_guides/hc_providers/j1visa.php
The Catholic Health Association of the United States published a resource for communities seeking to effectively recruit and retain J-1 Visa Physicians in rural areas: http://www.chausa.org/Pub/MainNav/News/HP/Archive/2004/03MarApr/articles/Special Section/HP0403m.htm?print=true
National Association of Community Health Centers The National Association of Community Health Centers Inc. is a non-profit organization whose mission is to enhance and expand access to quality, community-responsive health care for America's medically underserved and uninsured. In serving its mission, this association represents the nation's network of over 1,000 Federally Qualified Health Centers which serve 16 million people through 5,000 sites located in all of the 50 states, Puerto Rico, the District of Columbia, the U.S. Virgin Islands and Guam. http://www.nachc.com
National Center for Farmworker Health The National Center for Farmworker Health, established in 1975, is dedicated to improving the health status of farmworker families by providing information services and products to a network of more than 500 migrant health center service sites in the United States as well as other organizations and individuals serving the farmworker population. http://www.ncfh.org
National Cooperative of Health Networks The National Cooperative of Health Networks is a national association of health network executives and strategic health partners, whose mission is to support and strengthen health alliances through collaborative efforts, networking, and educational opportunities. It is a member-focused organization that assists members in their professional and network development. http://www.nchn.org
National Health Service Corps The National Health Service Corp is a federal agency located within the U.S. Department Health and Human Services' Health Resources and Services Administration. The group assists medically underserved communities to recruit and retain primary care clinicians, including dental and mental and behavioral health professionals. Since 1972, more than 27,000 health care corps providers have served medically underserved areas across the country. There are currently more than 4,000 professionals placed through the National Health Service Corps. http://www.nhsc.bhpr.hrsa.gov/about/
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National Organization of State Offices of Rural Health National Organization of State Offices of Rural Health was created in 1995 by State Offices of Rural Health to promote a healthy rural America through state and community leadership. Its mission is to foster and promote legislation, information exchange, education, and liaison activities with all State Offices of Rural Health, the Federal Office of Rural Health Policy, the National Rural Health Association, and other organizations. http://www.nosorh.org
National Rural Health Association The National Rural Health Association is a national nonprofit membership organization with more than 10,000 members that provides leadership on rural health issues. The association's mission is to improve the health and wellbeing of rural Americans and to provide leadership on rural health issues through advocacy, communications, education, research and leadership. The membership is made up of a diverse collection of individuals and organizations, all of whom share a common interest in rural health. http://www.nrharural.org
National Rural Recruitment and Retention Network The National Rural Recruitment and Retention Network (3R Net) is made up of state organizations such as State Offices of Rural Health, Area Health Education Centers, Cooperative Agreement Agencies and State Primary Care Associations. These not-forprofit organizations help health professionals locate practice sites in rural areas throughout the country. http://www.3rnet.org
Office of Rural Health Policy The Office of Rural Health Policy promotes better health care service in rural America. Established in August 1987, this office is located within the Health Resources and Services Administration and charged with informing and advising the Department of Health and Human Services on matters affecting rural hospitals, and health care, coordinating activities within the department that relate to rural health care, and maintaining a national information clearinghouse. http://ruralhealth.hrsa.gov
Planned Approach to Community Health Planned Approach to Community Health is a cooperative program of technical assistance managed and supported by the Centers for Disease Control. The goal of this group is to increase the capacity of communities to plan, implement, and evaluate comprehensive, community-based health promotion programs targeted toward priority health problems. http://www.cdc.gov/search.do?action=search&queryText=PATCH
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Racial and Ethnic Approaches to Community Health Racial and Ethnic Approaches to Community Health is a federal initiative that includes the goal of eliminating racial and ethnic disparities in health by the year 2010. The program was launched in 1999; the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has a major leadership role in carrying out the goals set forward in this initiative. These approaches focus on the following racial and ethnic minority populations in the United States: African Americans, Alaska Natives, American Indians, Asian Americans, Hispanic Americans, and Pacific Islanders. This initiative supports urban and rural community coalitions in designing, implementing, and evaluating community-driven strategies to eliminate health disparities. While there are no current plans to fund new grantees, the Web site includes examples of community practices. www.cdc.gov/reach/index.htm
Rural Assistance Center A product of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services' Rural Initiative, the Rural Assistance Center is established in December 2002 as a rural health and human services information portal. This organization helps rural communities and other rural stakeholders access the full range of available programs, funding, and research that can enable them to provide quality health and human services to rural residents. http://www.raconline.org
Rural Policy Research Institute The Rural Policy Research Institute conducts policy-relevant research and facilitates public dialogue to assist policymakers in understanding the rural impacts of public policies and programs. The RUPRI Web site includes publications regarding a wide range of rural health topics. http://www.rupri.org/ruralHealth/
Training in Partnership Television (TiP-TV) Training in Partnership Television, TiP-TV, provides continuing education and training programs broadcast via satellite as well as online. More than 100 continuing education courses are available yearly for all health care professionals. The programs are available by a subscription purchased either through a GE Service Contract or through a stand-alone subscription. www.gehealthcare.com
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Web Sites of Interest
Diabetes: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Community Guide: http://www.thecommunityguide.org/diabetes/
Cardiovascular Disease Centers for Disease Control and Prevention:
www.cdc.gov/doc.do/id/0900f3ec802720b8 American Heart Association: www.americanheart.org
Cancer: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Community Guide:
http://www.thecommunityguide.org/cancer/idm/default.htm Georgia Cancer Coalition: www.gacancercoalition.com National Cancer Institute: www.cancer.gov Centers for Disease Control and Prevention: http://www.cdc.gov/cancer/ Cancer Control Planet: http://cancercontrolplanet.cancer.gov/
Infant Health: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Reproductive Health:
http://www.cdc.gov/reproductivehealth/index.htm U.S. Department of Health and Human Services The National Women's Health
Information Center Breastfeeding Best for Baby, Best for Mom: http://www.cdc.gov/reproductivehealth/index.htm Zero to Three: http://www.zerotothree.org/ Maternal and Child Health Library: http://www.mchlibrary.info/KnowledgePaths/kp_infmort.html Center for Healthier Children, Families & Communities: http://www.healthychild.ucla.edu/NationalCenter/ Annie E. Casey Foundation, Kids Count: http://www.aecf.org/kidscount/
Nutrition: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Community Guide:
http://www.thecommunityguide.org/nutrition/ University of Arkansas Department of Agriculture- Food Stamp Nutrition Education in
Arkansas Curricula Educational Materials: http://www.arfamilies.org/health_nutrition/fsne/educational_materials/curricula.htm#A dult Georgia's Nutrition and Physical Activity Initiative (includes Take Charge of Your Health, Georgia): http://health.state.ga.us/nutandpa/ Georgia Coalition for Physical Activity and Nutrition: http://www.g-pan.org/
115
Obesity: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Community Guide: http://www.thecommunityguide.org/obese/
Physical Activity: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Community Guide:
http://www.thecommunityguide.org/pa/default.htm#inter Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Healthy Youth, Promoting Better
Health Strategies: http://www.cdc.gov/HealthyYouth/physicalactivity/promoting_health/strategies/school .htm National Coalition for Promoting Physical Activity: http://www.ncppa.org/physactfactsheets.asp The President's Council on Physical Fitness and Sports: http://www.fitness.gov/about_overview.htm SPARK (Sports, Play and Active Recreation for Kids): http://www.schoolsofwellness.org/index.cfm?fuseaction=pages.spark&CFID=4023& CFTOKEN=60372664 Georgia's Nutrition and Physical Activity Initiative (includes Take Charge of Your Health, Georgia): http://health.state.ga.us/nutandpa/ Georgia Coalition for Physical Activity and Nutrition: http://www.g-pan.org/
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Health Facilities In Georgia's Rural Counties
117
County
APPLING ATKINSON
BACON BAKER BANKS BEN HILL BERRIEN BLECKLEY BRANTLEY BROOKS BRYAN
BURKE
BUTTS CALHOUN
Rural and Critical Access (CAH) Hospitals
APPLING HOSPITAL Baxley, GA
BACON COUNTY HOSPITAL (CAH) Alma, GA
DORMINY MEDICAL CENTER Fitzgerald, GA BERRIEN COUNTY HOSPITAL Nashville, GA BLECKLEY MEMORIAL HOSPITAL. (CAH) Cochran, GA
BROOKS COUNTY HOSPITAL (CAH) Quitman, GA
BURKE MEDICAL CENTER Waynesboro, GA
SYLVAN GROVE HOSPITAL (CAH) Jackson, GA CALHOUN MEMORIAL hOSPITAL (CAH) Arlington, GA
Federally Qualified Health Centers
Rural Health Clinics
South Central Primary Care Center Pearson, GA Albany Area Primary Health Care, Inc. Newton, GA
McKinney Community Health Center, Inc. Nahunta, GA
Albany Area Primary Health Care, Inc. Edison, GA
BACON COUNTY COMMUNITY CARE CENTER Alma, GA
BJC MED CARE - HOMER Homer, GA DORMINY CARE CLINIC Fitzgerald, GA
BLECKLEY MEDICAL CLINIC Cochran, GA
ARCHBOLD PAVO PRIMARY CC Pavo, GA BROOKS MEDICAL ASSOCIATES Quitman, GA ST. JOSEPH'S/CANDLER MEDICAL GROUP Pembroke, GA B. LAMAR MURRAY, M.D. (RHCS) Waynesboro, GA KEYSVILLE FAMILY HEALTH CENTER Keysville, GA MEDICAL ASSOCIATES Waynesboro, GA MEDICAL ASSOCIATES OF SARDIS Sardis, GA
PHOEBE FAMILY MEDICAL CENTER- ARLINGTON Arlington, GA ROBERT E JENNINGS MEDICAL CLINIC Arlington, GA
118
County
CAMDEN CANDLER
CHARLT ON
Rural and Critical Access (CAH)
Hospitals
SE GA. HEALT H SYST EM-CAMDEN CAMPUS Saint Marys, GA CANDLER COUNT Y HOSP. (CAH) Metter, GA CHARLT ON MEMORIAL HOSP. (CAH) Folkston, GA
CHAT T AHOOCHEE
CLINCH COOK
CRISP
CLINCH MEMORIAL HOSPIT AL (CAH) Hom erville, GA MEMORIAL HOSPIT AL OF ADEL Adel, GA CRISP REGIONAL HOSPIT AL Cordele, GA
Federally Qualified Health Centers
McKinney Community Health Center, Inc. Folkston, GA McKinney Community Health Center, Inc. St. George, GA Southwest Georgia Health Care, Inc. Cusseta, GA
DADE DECAT UR
DODGE DOOLY
EARLY
MEMORIAL HOSPIT AL & MANOR Bainbridge, GA
DODGE COUNT Y HOSPIT AL Eastm an, GA
EARLY MEMORIAL HOSPIT AL (CAH) Blakely, GA
Primary Health Care Center of Dade, Inc. Trenton, GA
Un aHealt h Unadilla, GA Primary Care of Southwest Georgia Blakely, GA
EFFINGHAM ELBERT
EMANUEL
EFFINGHAM HOSPIT AL (CAH) Springfield, GA ELBERT MEMORIAL HOSPIT AL Elberton, GA EMANUAL MEDICAL CENT ER Swainsboro, GA EMANUAL MEDICAL CENT ER Swainsboro, GA
MedLink Georgia, Inc. Bowm an, GA East Georgia Healthcare Center, Inc. Swainsboro, GA East Georgia Healthcare Center, Inc. Swainsboro, GA
Rural Health Clinics
ARABI HEALT H CARE CLINIC Arabi, GA CRISP REGIONAL HEALT H CARE CLINIC Cordele, GA
CENT ER FOR COMMUNIT Y HEALT HCARE SERVICES Eastm an, GA
BLAKELY IMMEDIAT E CARE CENT ER Blakely, GA BLAKELY MEDICAL GROUP Blakely, GA
MEDICAL CENT ER OF ELBERT ON, LLP, T HE Elberton, GA SMIT H RURAL HEALT H CLINIC Swainsboro, GA T WIN CIT Y FAMILY HEALT H CENT ER Twin City, GA
119
County
EVANS
FANNIN
FRANKLIN GILMER
GLASCOCK GRADY GREENE
HANCOCK
HARALSON
Rural and Critical Access (CAH) Hospitals
EVANS MEMORIAL HOSPIT AL Claxton, GA FANNIN REGIONAL HOSPIT AL Blue Ridge, GA
COBB MEMORIAL HOSPIT AL Royston, GA NORT H GA. MED. CENT ER Ellijay, GA
GRADY GENERAL HOSPIT AL Cairo, GA MINNIE G. BOSWELL MEM. HOSP. (CAH) Greensboro, GA
HIGGINS GENERAL HOSPIT AL (CAH) Brem en, GA
Federally Qualified Health Centers
Georgia Mountains Health Services Morganton, GA Georgia Mountains Health Services Blue Ridge, GA MedLink Georgia, Inc. Lavonia, GA Georgia Mountains Health Services Ellijay, GA T ri-County Health System, Inc. Gibson, GA
T enderCare Clinic Greensboro, GA T ri-County Health System, Inc. Sparta, GA
HART HEARD IRWIN JASP ER JEFF DAVIS
HART COUNT Y HOSPIT AL Hartwell, GA
IRWIN COUNT Y HOSPIT AL Ocilla, GA JASPER MEMORIAL HOSPIT AL (CAH) Monticello, GA JEFF DAVIS HOSPIT AL (CAH) Hazlehurst, GA
MedLink Georgia, Inc. Hartwell, GA Palmetto Health Council, Inc. Franklin, GA South Central Primary Care Center Ocilla, GA
Rural Health Clinics
MORGANT ON FAMILY PRACT ICE Morganton, GA MOUNT AIN MEDICAL INC Blue Ridge, GA T RI-COUNT Y MEDICAL CENT ER Royston, GA
SOUT HWEST GEORGIA FAMILY MEDICINE RHC Cairo, GA
FAMILY PRACT ICE & SURGERY CENT ER Sparta, GA BUCHANAN MEDICAL CLINIC Buchanan, GA HARALSON FAMILY HEALT HCARE Brem en, GA T ALLAPOOSA FAMILY HEALT HCARE Tallapoosa, GA
FRANKLIN PRIMARY HEALT H CARE CLINIC Franklin, GA IRWIN FAMILY MEDICINE Ocilla, GA
120
County
Rural and Critical Access (CAH) Hospitals
JEFFERSON HOSPIT AL Louisville, GA
Federally Qualified Health Centers
JEFFERSON
JENKINS JOHNSON LAMAR LANIER
LEE LIBERT Y LUMP KIN MACON
MADISON
JENKINS COUNT Y HOSPIT AL (CAH) Millen, GA
LOUIS SMIT H MEM. HOSPIT AL (CAH) Lakeland, GA
LIBERT Y REGIONAL MED. CT R. (CAH) Hinesville, GA CHEST AT EE REGIONAL HOSP Dahlonega, GA FLINT RIVER COMMUNIT Y HOSP. Montezuma, GA
MARION MCDUFFIE MCINT OSH MERIWET HER
MCDUFFIE REG. MED. CT R. Thomson, GA
WARM SPRINGS MED. CT R. (CAH) Warm Springs, GA
Community Health Care Systems, Inc. Wrightsville, GA Palmetto Health Council, Inc. Barnesville, GA
Albany Area Primary Health Care, Inc. Leesburg, GA
MedLink Georgia, Inc. Colbert, GA
Rural Health Clinics
FIROZ PAT KA, MD Louisville, GA NORT H JEFFERSON MEDICAL CENT ER Wrens, GA PHYSICIANS' HEALT H GROUP Louisville, GA PHYSICIANS' HEALT H GROUP- WADLEY Wadley, GA WRENS PHYSICIANS HEALT H GROUP Wrens, GA JENKINS COUNT Y FAMILY MEDICINE Millen, GA
FAMILY CARE AMERICA HEALT H Hinesville, GA
FLINT RIVER RHC- OGLET HORPE Oglethorpe, GA DANIELSVILLE FAMILY PRACT ICE Danielsville, GA T RI COUNT Y MEDICAL CENT ER RHC Danielsville, GA BUENA VIST A FAMILY CLINIC Buena Vista, GA T HOMSON PEDIAT RICS & INT ERNAL MEDICINE Thomson, GA PEDS 'R US Darien, GA
121
County
MILLER
Rural and Critical Access (CAH) Hospitals
MILLER COUNT Y HOSPIT AL (CAH) Colquitt, GA
MIT CHELL
MIT CHELL COUNT Y HOSP. (CAH) Camilla, GA
Federally Qualified Health Centers
MONROE
MONROE COUNT Y HOSPIT AL (CAH) Forsyth, GA
MONT GOMERY
MORGAN OGLET HORPE
P EACH P ICKENS
MORGAN MEMORIAL HOSP. (CAH) Madison, GA
PEACH REGIONAL MED. CT R. (CAH) Fort Valley, GA PIEDMONT MOUNT AINSIDE MEDICAL CENT ER. Jasper, GA
P IERCE
P IKE P OLK P ULASKI
POLK MEDICAL CENT ER (CAH) Cedartown, GA T AYLOR REGIONAL HOSP. Hawkinsville, GA
MedLink Georgia, Inc. Lexington, GA
McKinney Community Health Center, Inc. Blackshear, GA McKinney Community Health Center, Inc. Offerm an, GA Palmetto Health Council, Inc. Zebulon, GA
Rural Health Clinics
INFOMEDIX, PC Colquitt, GA MILLER COUNT Y MEDICAL CENT ER Colquitt, GA CAMILLA FAMILY MEDICAL ASSOCIAT ES RHC Cam illa, GA CAMILLA PEDIAT RIC CENT ER Cam illa, GA PHOEBE FAMILY MEDICAL CENT ER- CAMILLA Cam illa, GA
GLENWOOD FAMILY CLINIC Uvalda, GA HIGGST ON FAMILY CLINIC Ailey, GA MONT GOMERY INT ERNAL MEDICINE Mount Vernon, GA
CRAWFORD-LEXINGT ON MEDICAL CENT ER RHC Lexington, GA EARLY FAMILY PRACT ICE CENT ER Fort Valley, GA
PAT T ERSON COMMUNIT Y CARE CENT ER Patterson, GA
FLOYD PRIMARY CARE - ROCKMART Rockm art, GA
122
County
PUT NAM
Rural and Critical Access (CAH) Hospitals
PUT NAM GENERAL HOSP. (CAH) Eatonton, GA
Federally Qualified Health Centers
QUIT MAN RABUN
MOUNT AIN LAKES MED. CT R (CAH) Clayton, GA
Southwest Georgia Health Care, Inc. Georgetown, GA MedLink Georgia, Inc. Clayton, GA
RANDOLP H
SW GA. REG. MEDICAL CT R. (CAH) Cuthbert, GA
SCHLEY
SCREVEN SEMINOLE ST EPHENS ST EWART
SUMT ER T ALBOT T ALIAFERRO
SCREVEN COUNT Y HOSP. (CAH) Sylvania, GA DONALDSONVILLE HOSP. Donalsonville, GA ST EPHENS COUNT Y HOSPIT AL Toccoa, GA ST EWART WEBST ER HOSP. (CAH) Richland, GA SUMT ER REGIONAL HOSP. Am ericus, GA
Southwest Georgia Health Care, Inc. Richland, GA Southwest Georgia Health Care, Inc. Plains, GA Valley Healthcare System, Inc. Talbotton, GA T ri-County Health System, Inc. Crawfordville, GA
Rural Health Clinics
EAT ONT ON PEDIAT RICS Eatonton, GA FAMILY PRACT ICE & SURGERY Eatonton, GA
MOUT AIN VALLEY MEDICAL CENT ER Dillard, GA RIDGECREST MEDICAL GROUP Clayton, GA RANDOLPH MEDICAL ASSOCIAT ES Cuthbert, GA RANDOLPH MEDICAL ASSOCIAT ES Shellm an, GA ELLAVILLE PRIMARY MEDICINE CENT ER Ellaville, GA FLINT RIVER- RHC Ellaville, GA SCHLEY COUNT Y PRIMARY HLT H CARE CT R Ellaville, GA
LUMPKIN FAMILY CLINIC Lum pkin, GA
123
County
T AT T NALL
Rural and Critical Access (CAH) Hospitals
T AT T NALL COMMUNIT Y HOSP. (CAH) Reidsville, GA
Federally Qualified Health Centers
East Georgia Healthcare Center, Inc. Reidsville, GA
T ELFAIR T ERRELL
T OOMBS
T ELFAIR REGIONAL HOSP. (CAH) Mc Rae, GA
MEADOWS MEMORIAL HOSP. Vidalia, GA
T OWNS T REUT LEN
CHAT UGE REGIONAL HOSP. (CAH) Hiawassee, GA
T URNER
UNION UP SON WARREN
WASHINGT ON
UNION GENERAL HOSPIT AL Blairsville, GA UPSON REG. MEDICAL CT R. Thom aston, GA
WASHINGT ON CO. REG. MED. CT R. Sandersville, GA
WAYNE WHEELER WILCOX
WAYNE MEMORIAL HOSPIT AL Jesup, GA WHEELER COUNT Y HOSPIT AL (CAH) Glenwood, GA
Albany Area Primary Health Care, Inc. Dawson, GA
East Georgia Healthcare Center, Inc. Soperton, GA
T ri-County Health System, Inc. Warrenton, GA Community Health Care Systems, Inc. Sandersville, GA Community Health Care Systems, Inc. Tennille, GA
Rural Health Clinics
T AT T NALL COUNT Y PRIMARY CARE Glennville, GA T AT T NALL MEDICAL GROUP-COBBT OWN Reidsville, GA T HOMAS J FERRARI, MD Reidsville, GA
FAMILY HEALT H CENT ER Vidalia, GA RODNEY T . ST ANLEY SR. HEALT H CENT ER Lyons, GA HIAWASSEE FAMILY PRACT ICE, PC Hiawassee, GA MILLION PINES FAMILY HEALT H CENT ER Soperton, GA HEALT HPLUS - ASHBURN Ashburn, GA PHOEBE FAMILY MEDICINE - ASHBURN CLINIC Ashburn, GA BLUE MOUNT AIN FAMILY PRACT ICE Blairsville, GA
WARRENT ON MEDICAL CENT ER Warrenton, GA
ACCORD FAMILY MEDICINE Glenwood, GA ROCHELLE HEALT HCARE CENT ER Rochelle, GA
124
County
WILKES WORT H
Rural and Critical Access (CAH)
Hospitals
WILLS MEMORIAL HOSPIT AL (CAH) Washington, GA PHOEBE WORT H MED. CT R. (CAH) Sylvester, GA
Federally Qualified Health Centers
MedLink Georgia, Inc. Washington, GA
Rural Health Clinics
PHOEBE WORT H FAMILY MEDICINE Sylvester, GA WARWICK HEALT H CARE CLINIC Warwick, GA
125
Appendix C - County Level Health and Demographic Data
126
2005 Health data18 By County Source: May 2007 Georgia Department of Human Resources, Division of Public Health,
Office of Health Information and Policy
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
305.8 *
217.3 38.7
Appling Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
1,804.60 94.7 345.3 217.2
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
Atkinson Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
314.7 *
281.3 *
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
1,481.90 124.5 311.3 286.4
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
18 Obesity is the fifth indicator. No county level obesity data is available. State level obesity data may be found on page 22. * Data Not Available.
127
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
390.6 29.6 180.5
*
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
166.4 0
123.3 *
Bacon Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
307.7 8
186.6 23
Baker Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
1,917.30 57.8 260.1 356.5
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
1,131.40 0
192.6 *
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
128
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
410.3 *
271.9 50.3
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
416.8 20.6 241.2
*
Banks Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
307.7 8
186.6 23
Ben Hill Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
1,607.00 *
317.7 193.1
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
2,027.00 144.4 294.5 196.4
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
129
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
Berrien Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
333.8 *
190.5 *
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
Bleckley Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
293.1 *
231.2 *
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
1,741.70 59.9 281.3 227.4
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
2,158.00 82.4 263.6 230.6
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
130
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
Brantley Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
299.5 *
240.5 *
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
Brooks Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
449.2 *
208.7 0
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
1,342.70 *
238.8 135.6
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
1,659.80 42.9 281.7 287.9
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
131
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
445.9 0
241.1 *
Bryan Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
1,089.40 52.5 255.7 98.1
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
540.4 11.8 230.6 35.8
Burke Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
1,832.70 68.7 283.3 261.8
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
132
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
Butts Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
262.1 *
172.3 35.1
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
Calhoun Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
352.9 *
244.7 *
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
1,815.20 47.5 299.4 128.3
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
1,657.70 *
318.2 368.4
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
133
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
Candler Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
306.1 *
159 *
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
Charlton Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
349.8 0
134.7 *
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
1,773.10 48.4 203.5 213.2
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
519 0
166.8 120.5
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
134
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Chattahoochee
Number of Number of
Deaths for Deaths for
every
every
100,000
100,000
people
people
(county)
(Georgia)
288.2 *
199 0
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
292.9 *
74.9 68.1
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
Chattooga Number of Deaths for every 100,000 people (Georgia)
353.9 17.4 249.3 27.7
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
1,844.20 *
319.9 135.5
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
135
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
314.2 *
209.4 *
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
464.6 *
258.1 *
Clay Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
307.7 8
186.6 23
Clinch Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
431.8 * * 0
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
1,386.50 *
328.8 271.6
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
136
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
Cook Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
393.3 *
205.9 47.6
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
Crawford Number of Deaths for every 100,000 people (Georgia)
156.2 *
264.9 *
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
1,955.30 79.4 372.7 201.6
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
1,809.80 *
225.3 108.7
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
137
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
388.3 *
188.1 39.3
Crisp Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
2,230.10 54.5 331.6 349.7
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
265.1 *
224.7 *
Dade Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
280.5 0
130.9 68.6
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
138
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
Dawson Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
321.7 *
208.1 *
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
Decatur Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
296.9 *
174.3 37.1
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
1,368.40 30.4 228.1 91.2
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
1,355.80 52.4 269.1 216.6
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
139
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
340 19.2 197
*
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
459.2 *
198.1 46
Dodge Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
307.7 8
186.6 23
Dooly Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
2,171.20 46
296.3 260.5
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
2,153.40 68.1 306.4 289.4
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
140
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
418.4 0
227.1 *
Early Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
870.9 *
149.3 132.7
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
257.9 *
276.3 0
Echols Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
822.9 117.6 258.6
*
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
141
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
Elbert Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
361.5 20.3 196.4 39.5
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
Emanuel Number of Deaths for every 100,000 people (Georgia)
398.3 12.8 201.6 22.7
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
2,283.80 24
264.4 235.6
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
2,257.10 67.8 343.8 239.7
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
142
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
285 *
141.2 *
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
287.2 *
198.1 54.4
Evans Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
307.7 8
186.6 23
Fannin Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
1,870.10 87.4 253.4 183.5
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
1,813.90 *
287.8 132.5
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
143
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
295 *
164.3 50.5
Franklin Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
1,778.60 64.8 324.2 152.8
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
329.9 *
188.2 41
Gilmer Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
1,547.50 65.8 267.1 80.5
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
144
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
Glascock Number of Deaths for every 100,000 people (Georgia)
334.1 0 * *
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
Grady Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
396.9 *
271.8 25.5
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
2,181.10 0
221.8 184.8
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
1,132.20 69.5 331.1 167.6
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
145
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
Greene Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
366.4 *
172.8 *
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
Hancock Number of Deaths for every 100,000 people (Georgia)
398.6 *
196.6 53.4
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
1,637.70 38.2 414.2 216.7
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
1,783.70 72.6 248.9 217.8
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
146
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
Haralson Number of Deaths for every 100,000 people (Georgia)
404.2 *
176.2 19.8
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
1,919.70 52.9 352.9 123.5
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
284.1 *
207.1 23.5
Harris Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
1,238.30 25.2 277.2 86.4
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
147
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
377.3 0
165.7 25.6
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
293.9 *
267.6 *
Hart Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
307.7 8
186.6 23
Heard Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
1,651.70 29.1 299.6 174.7
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
1,524.80 *
299.7 158.6
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
148
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
330.7 0
224.2 *
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
357.9 *
196.3 *
Irwin Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
307.7 8
186.6 23
Jasper Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
1,941.90 *
257.6 208.1
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
1,627.70 53.2 273.8 106.5
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
149
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
Jeff Davis Number of Deaths for every 100,000 people (Georgia)
542.6 *
261.6 44.4
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
1,918.50 38.2 359.2 221.7
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
Jefferson Number of Deaths for every 100,000 people (Georgia)
308.9 *
269.9 31.6
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
2,174.20 35.4 277.7 307.2
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
150
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
Jenkins Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
354 0
189.6 *
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
Johnson Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
369.9 0
223.6 *
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
1,924.60 0
217.7 320.8
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
2,075.90 *
293.6 157.3
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
151
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
356.2 *
192 17.9
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
373.1 0
242.6 *
Jones Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
307.7 8
186.6 23
Lamar Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
1,751.40 18.6 234.8 119.2
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
1,990.50 *
366.3 164.9
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
152
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
230.3 *
219.4 *
Lanier Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
1,707.90 *
331 238.3
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
262.9 *
149.5 24
Lee Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
861.8 *
192.9 96.5
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
153
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
293 10.2 239.8 48.6
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
353.4 *
204.5 *
Liberty Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
307.7 8
186.6 23
Lincoln Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
745.5 71.2 192.9 100.8
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
2,120.10 0
341.2 207.1
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
154
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
Long Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
374.3 *
315.3 *
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
Lumpkin Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
281.2 0
190.8 64.6
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
739.9 *
261.7 126.3
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
1,471.80 28.8 308.3 90.4
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
155
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
543.9 *
160.3 66.2
Macon Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
2,102.60 *
276.5 320.1
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
Madison Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
362.7 0
183.2 26.3
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
1,601.40 44
249.2 205.2
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
156
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
Marion Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
496.7 *
240.5 *
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
McDuffie Number of Deaths for every 100,000 people (Georgia)
360.1 *
219.2 70.1
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
1,132.00 82.8 276.1 151.8
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
1,683.30 32.2 280.6 188.6
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
157
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
McIntosh Number of Deaths for every 100,000 people (Georgia)
269.8 *
234.7 *
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
Meriwether Number of Deaths for every 100,000 people (Georgia)
508.1 *
205.5 48.3
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
1,508.90 *
352.4 162.6
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
1,788.90 56.7 240 174.5
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
158
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
225.7 *
199.9 *
Miller Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
1,685.90 *
433.5 208.7
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
424.7 18
211.7 *
Mitchell Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
1,492.20 67.3 357.3 100.9
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
159
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
Monroe Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
397.8 *
226.2 37.9
307.7 8
186.6 23
Montgomery
Number of Number of
Deaths for Deaths for
every
every
100,000
100,000
people
people
(county)
(Georgia)
508.2 *
254.1 *
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
1,778.40 *
378.4 176.6
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
1,717.40 *
235.7 134.7
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
160
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
332.1 *
168.6 *
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
373.5 *
188.8 *
Morgan Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
307.7 8
186.6 23
Oconee Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
1,429.20 40 343
120.1
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
1,116.00 *
248.8 74
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
161
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
Oglethorpe Number of Deaths for every 100,000 people (Georgia)
462.5 *
152.9 *
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
1,543.10 44.1 220.4 147
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
338.6 *
158.3 29.3
Peach Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
1,710.10 44.4 278.3 104.9
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
162
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
388.2 *
171.3 *
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
261.8 0
188.4 43
Pickens Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
307.7 8
186.6 23
Pierce Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
1,715.80 70.3 369.2 84.4
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
1,606.40 *
227.8 169.4
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
163
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
297 *
232.5 *
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
413.6 0
207 52.2
Pike Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
307.7 8
186.6 23
Pulaski Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
1,506.70 49.6 241.8 105.4
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
2,434.00 51.4 328.6 246.5
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
164
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
240.7 *
116.8 *
Putnam Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
1,860.90 45.4 327.8 176.5
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
Quitman Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
236 *
360.3 0
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
324.3 0
202.7 202.7
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
165
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
Rabun Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
222.5 0
197.3 25.8
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
Randolph Number of Deaths for every 100,000 people (Georgia)
393 *
190.5 *
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
1,591.30 49.7 391.6 149.2
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
1,641.60 68.4 383 301
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
166
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
Schley Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
571.8 0
272.9 *
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
Screven Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
317.6 *
197.9 48.4
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
1,649.70 0
291.1 *
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
1,827.60 32.4 343.5 259.2
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
167
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
Seminole Number of Deaths for every 100,000 people (Georgia)
339 *
172.1 88.8
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
1,073.10 *
249.3 238.5
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
Stephens Number of Deaths for every 100,000 people (Georgia)
311.3 *
193.1 *
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
2,198.70 127.7 315.2 231.4
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
168
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
361.5 *
200.8 *
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
269.8 11.4 202.5 26.9
Stewart Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
307.7 8
186.6 23
Sumter Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
1,884.50 *
450.6 348.2
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
1,382.50 51.7 355.5 221.8
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
169
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
Talbot Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
468.4 *
156 *
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
Taliaferro Number of Deaths for every 100,000 people (Georgia)
421.1 0
384.6 *
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
1,669.40 0
417.3 208.7
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
2,793.00 *
328.6 328.6
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
170
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
342.1 *
280.6 *
Tattnall Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
1,663.00 51.7 301.6 206.8
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
216.3 0
335.3 65.7
Taylor Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
2,126.70 *
495.1 135
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
171
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
504.9 *
189.2 0
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
384.9 0
250.9 *
Telfair Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
307.7 8
186.6 23
Terrell Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
2,809.50 *
348.4 265.1
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
1,540.50 84
382.8 252.1
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
172
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
Toombs Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
398.9 *
264.9 *
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
Towns Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
202.7 0
262.4 *
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
1,891.90 80.7 363 146.7
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
2,074.60 *
368.4 155.1
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
173
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
Treutlen Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
372.4 *
213.7 *
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
2,428.60 *
222.1 222.1
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
407.2 *
168.8 *
Turner Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
1,741.60 73.9 369.4 73.9
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
174
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
419.1 *
141.6 *
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
231.6 0
232.8 *
Twiggs Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
307.7 8
186.6 23
Union Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
2,000.20 *
378.7 155.4
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
1,941.20 30.3 460 85.9
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
175
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
495.5 *
196.8 37.6
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
427.5 *
295.5 65.2
Upson Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
307.7 8
186.6 23
Warren Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
2,344.70 68.6 339.6 180.6
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
2,081.60 *
278.6 295
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
176
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
Washington Number of Deaths for every 100,000 people (Georgia)
337.4 *
287.6 21.9
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
1,700.00 79.5 338 198.8
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
408 19.7 194.3
*
Wayne Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
2,078.20 45.8 348.7 221.9
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
177
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
Webster Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
306.3 0 * 0
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
Wheeler Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
356.1 *
159.9 *
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
1,266.90 *
218.4 *
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
1,774.50 74.6 134.2 238.6
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
178
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
247.1 *
172.8 24.8
White Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
1,754.30 29.1 282.7 83.1
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
373.5 0
177.4 *
Wilcox Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
2,132.80 80.3 298.1 172
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
179
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
358.3 *
162 *
Wilkes Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
2,562.90 *
286.9 200.8
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
Wilkinson Number of Deaths for every 100,000 people (Georgia)
397.9 *
122.5 *
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
2,001.40 49.3 285.9 167.6
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
180
Cardiovascular Disease Infant Mortality Cancer Diabetes
Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (county)
294.2 *
207 26.9
Worth Number of Deaths for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
307.7 8
186.6 23
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (county)
1,363.90 31.8 304.6 154.6
Number of Cases for
every 100,000 people (Georgia)
1,242.70 31.5 247.8 127.7
Source: May 2007 Georgia Department of Human Resources, Division of Public Health, Office of Health Information and Policy
181
Demographic Characteristics of Georgia's Rural Counties
182
DEMOGRAPHIC CHARACTERISTICS OF GEORGIA'S RURAL COUNTIES
Geographic area
RURAL COUNTIES Appling County Atkinson County Bacon County Baker County Banks County Ben Hill County Berrien County Bleckley County Brantley County Brooks County Bryan County Burke County Butts County Calhoun County Candler County Charlton County Chattahoochee County Chattooga County Clay County
Total population
Age distribution
Income in 1999 below poverty level
Under 18 years Number Percent
65 years and over Number Percent
Percent of population for whom poverty status is
determined
Population 1619
Percent Percent not
Related
65
of
enrolled in
All
children years families high school
ages under 18 and
and not a high
years
over
school
graduate
17,419
4720.55
27.1
2,062
11.8
18.6
23.9
24.4
14.9
14.1
7,609
2305.53
30.3
705
9.3
23
27.1
31
18.1
33.3
10,103
2646.99
26.2
1,293
12.8
23.7
31.4
25.7
20.2
8.6
4,074
1112.20
27.3
557
13.7
23.4
32.5
20.1
19.9
5.6
14,422
3778.56
26.2
1,512
10.5
12.5
14
16.3
9.8
16.9
17,484
4808.10
27.5
2,328
13.3
22.3
33.3
17.6
18.7
18.5
16,235
4415.92
27.2
2,027
12.5
17.7
25.4
13
14.6
16.3
11,666
3103.16
26.6
1,584
13.6
15.9
24.1
17.8
11.7
5.8
14,629
4140.01
28.3
1,478
10.1
15.6
19.7
16.9
12.1
13.1
16,450
4425.05
26.9
2,465
15
23.4
32.4
20.1
19.1
17.4
23,417
7282.69
31.1
1,703
7.3
11.7
14.7
12.6
10.7
14.4
22,243
6962.06
31.3
2,416
10.9
28.7
39
29.8
23.8
14.3
19,522
4704.80
24.1
1,994
10.2
11.5
15
16.7
8.6
19.7
6,320
1396.72
22.1
794
12.6
26.5
39.2
26.5
23.2
8.1
9,577
2566.64
26.8
1,453
15.2
26.1
36.9
22
21.4
20.4
10,282
2827.55
27.5
994
9.7
20.9
29.1
20.4
17.8
15.3
14,882
4226.49
28.4
268
1.8
10.6
11.5
18.6
8.9
5.8
25,470
5832.63
22.9
3,641
14.3
14.3
17.4
14.9
11.3
19.9
3,357
862.75
25.7
655
19.5
31.3
43.4
23.9
28.1
7.8
Education
Population 25 years and over
Employment
Civilian labor force (16 years and older)
Percent with less than a 9th
grade education
Percent high school
graduate or higher
Percent unemployed
11.6
67.3
4.8
22.1
56.3
5.2
12
67.7
4.5
15.7
66
8.3
13.2
65.4
3
12.9
65.8
6.3
11.8
66
4.5
12.9
71.7
6
9.6
72.5
4.9
12
67.5
5.3
5.8
79
3.1
13.3
64.9
9.3
10.1
69.8
3.9
13.4
65.5
5.6
17.9
56.9
7.2
10.9
65.1
5.2
2.4
88.8
7.5
16.6
60.4
5.6
13.6
64.3
6.8
183
Geographic area
Clinch County Cook County Crawford County Crisp County Dade County Dawson County Decatur County Dodge County Dooly County Early County Echols County Elbert County Emanuel County Evans County Fannin County Franklin County Gilmer County Glascock County Grady County Greene County
Total population
Age distribution
Income in 1999 below poverty level
Under 18 years
65 years and over
Percent of population for whom poverty status is determined
Population 1619
Number
Percent
Number
Percent Percent not
of
enrolled in
Related
65
families high school
Percent
All ages
children years under 18 and
and not a high school
years
over
graduate
6,878
1918.96
27.9
814
11.8
23.4
26.9
30.9
22.2
8.9
15,771
4447.42
28.2
2,046
13
20.7
27.9
24.4
16.5
16.2
12,495
3448.62
27.6
1,150
9.2
15.4
17.2
23.8
12.7
16.6
21,996
6378.84
29
2,853
13
29.3
41.8
24
24.6
20.3
15,154
3606.65
23.8
1,820
12
9.7
7.4
12.5
7.5
12.2
15,999
4015.75
25.1
1,491
9.3
7.6
8.9
8.6
5.8
20.3
28,240
8048.40
28.5
3,743
13.3
22.7
33
19.2
19.2
15.6
19,171
4984.46
26
2,539
13.2
17.4
19.4
21.3
13.8
18.8
11,525
2950.40
25.6
1,362
11.8
22.1
29.5
21.2
18
12.6
12,354
3545.60
28.7
1,945
15.7
25.7
37.2
20.1
22.2
15.5
3,754
1099.92
29.3
340
9.1
28.7
33.1
29.8
22.3
26
20,511
5291.84
25.8
3,060
14.9
17.3
23.5
17.2
14.6
15.1
21,837
6070.69
27.8
2,909
13.3
27.4
36.7
27.5
21.8
18.9
10,495
2886.13
27.5
1,321
12.6
27
36.2
23.6
23.1
24.3
19,798
4137.78
20.9
3,766
19
12.4
14.1
14.2
10.2
7.1
20,285
4848.12
23.9
3,108
15.3
13.9
16.8
18.5
11
11.9
23,456
5699.81
24.3
3,082
13.1
12.5
12.6
16.9
9.3
26.2
2,556
608.33
23.8
466
18.2
17.2
10.7
38.5
9.4
17.1
23,659
6458.91
27.3
3,128
13.2
21.3
29.9
19.8
16.7
16.4
14,406
3615.91
25.1
2,073
14.4
22.3
33.8
20.2
16
17.7
Education
Population 25 years and over
Employment
Civilian labor force (16 years and older)
Percent with less than a 9th
grade education
Percent high school
graduate or higher
Percent unemployed
19.3
58.9
4.2
12.9
64.6
5.3
7.3
67.3
4.6
11.5
65.9
7
12.6
67
5.4
6
79.5
3.4
11.2
69.7
6.5
12.6
66.3
5.4
11.5
68.5
6.4
13.7
68.4
8.1
17.9
60.5
3.7
11
67.2
5.8
15
61.4
4.4
14.3
65.7
8.1
12.7
70.9
3.9
11.1
67
4.2
14.2
66
4.2
15.9
66.1
12.3
11.3
69.4
7.4
10.3
70.1
6.7
184
Geographic area
Hancock County Haralson County Harris County Hart County Heard County Irwin County Jasper County Jeff Davis County Jefferson County Jenkins County Johnson County Jones County Lamar County Lanier County Lee County Lincoln County Long County Lumpkin County McDuffie County McIntosh County
Total population
Age distribution
Income in 1999 below poverty level
Under 18 years
65 years and over
Percent of population for whom poverty status is determined
Population 1619
Number
Percent
Number
Percent Percent not
of
enrolled in
Related
65
families high school
Percent
All ages
children years under 18 and
and not a high school
years
over
graduate
10,076
2428.32
24.1
1,209
12
29.4
45.4
25.3
26.1
9.4
25,690
6705.09
26.1
3,347
13
15.5
18.1
16.1
11.4
21.5
23,695
6065.92
25.6
2,830
11.9
8.2
9.6
13.6
6.5
3.9
22,997
5404.30
23.5
3,797
16.5
14.8
19.1
16.5
12.2
14.5
11,012
3160.44
28.7
1,212
11
13.6
14.6
17.4
10.5
25.1
9,931
2860.13
28.8
1,396
14.1
17.8
23.3
20.8
13.5
9.3
11,426
3107.87
27.2
1,353
11.8
14.2
19.2
13.5
10.9
7.5
12,684
3450.05
27.2
1,514
11.9
19.4
21.7
22.1
16.8
20.7
17,266
4903.54
28.4
2,357
13.7
23
28.9
28.8
19.3
12.8
8,575
2443.88
28.5
1,163
13.6
28.4
39.6
25.5
22.3
14.1
8,560
2576.56
30.1
1,337
15.6
22.6
29.6
30.9
20.9
26.1
23,639
6406.17
27.1
2,441
10.3
10.2
12.3
12.2
7.7
7.6
15,912
3898.44
24.5
2,000
12.6
11.2
14.5
11
8.1
9.6
7,241
1984.03
27.4
771
10.6
18.5
22.9
24.2
15.3
21
24,757
7600.40
30.7
1,570
6.3
8.2
10.5
11.7
6.5
7.9
8,348
2036.91
24.4
1,218
14.6
15.3
19.6
15.9
12.4
12.7
10,304
3410.62
33.1
594
5.8
19.5
26
19.8
17.6
17.3
21,016
5106.89
24.3
2,040
9.7
13.2
13.5
16.3
9
12.6
21,231
5923.45
27.9
2,528
11.9
18.4
26
20
14.1
11.9
10,847
3037.16
28
1,280
11.8
18.7
24.1
16.9
15.7
14.8
Education
Population 25 years and over
Employment
Civilian labor force (16 years and older)
Percent with less than a 9th
grade education
Percent high school
graduate or higher
Percent unemployed
14.5
62.2
13.7
13.7
63
4.1
7.3
79
3.4
9.5
71.1
5.3
12.5
66
5.7
12.6
67.7
6
9.1
69.7
4.7
13.1
63.3
5.6
16.7
58.5
11.8
17.2
62
10.7
15.8
62.4
5.5
8.1
77.9
4.5
9.3
71.3
5.5
10.7
67
6.2
4.1
81.3
3.4
9.6
71
6
10
74.3
8.8
11.2
72
4
11.3
66.7
7.7
10
71.2
5.7
185
Geographic area
Macon County Madison County Marion County Meriwether County Miller County Mitchell County Monroe County Montgomery County Morgan County Oconee County Oglethorpe County Peach County Pickens County Pierce County Pike County Pulaski County Putnam County Quitman County Rabun County Randolph County
Total population
Age distribution
Income in 1999 below poverty level
Under 18 years
65 years and over
Percent of population for whom poverty status is determined
Population 1619
Number
Percent
Number
Percent Percent not
of
enrolled in
Related
65
families high school
Percent
All ages
children years under 18 and
and not a high school
years
over
graduate
14,074
3884.42
27.6
1,791
12.7
25.8
39
22.6
22.1
17
25,730
6766.99
26.3
2,827
11
11.6
14
16.5
9.2
17.7
7,144
2021.75
28.3
752
10.5
22.4
31.2
25.1
17.8
14.5
22,534
5994.04
26.6
3,068
13.6
17.8
25.9
16.3
13.6
13
6,383
1678.73
26.3
1,092
17.1
21.2
28.7
21.1
16.9
8.2
23,932
6533.44
27.3
2,810
11.7
26.4
38.5
20.3
22.3
15.2
21,757
5722.09
26.3
2,251
10.3
9.8
12
13.3
7.3
10.1
8,270
2067.50
25
877
10.6
19.9
24.7
23.9
15.8
10.8
15,457
4111.56
26.6
1,934
12.5
10.9
14.1
9.6
8.9
14
26,225
7919.95
30.2
2,238
8.5
6.5
7.4
11.4
4.9
4.6
12,635
3259.83
25.8
1,566
12.4
13.2
15.9
18.4
10
15.8
23,668
6153.68
26
2,331
9.8
20.2
24.5
13.5
15.2
13.6
22,983
5423.99
23.6
3,034
13.2
9.2
13.2
7.4
6.2
26.1
15,636
4174.81
26.7
1,903
12.2
18.4
25.5
22.4
14.4
20.9
13,688
3777.89
27.6
1,488
10.9
9.6
11.6
11
6.9
20.2
9,588
2214.83
23.1
1,272
13.3
16.4
19
18.7
12.3
19.8
18,812
4364.38
23.2
2,658
14.1
14.6
20.8
9.8
10.5
16
2,598
623.52
24
516
19.9
21.9
26.6
24.5
16.1
16
15,050
3280.90
21.8
2,730
18.1
11.1
11
13
8.1
11
7,791
2126.94
27.3
1,212
15.6
27.7
36.2
31
22
14.1
Education
Population 25 years and over
Employment
Civilian labor force (16 years and older)
Percent with less than a 9th
grade education
Percent high school
graduate or higher
Percent unemployed
16.2
63.2
9.1
8.5
70.8
2.7
11.9
65.4
3.6
12
65.8
7
13.6
69
4
12.1
65.3
6.2
7.9
77.7
3.4
9.3
71.4
3.9
8.2
74
5.1
4.5
86.7
3.7
9.6
72.1
3
9.2
73.4
12.9
11.7
70.2
2.3
12
69.8
4
8.4
75.3
3.4
8.8
73.4
5.5
7.9
75.5
3.8
16.2
57.8
5.8
8.5
75.4
4.9
16.8
62.4
7.9
186
Geographic area
Schley County Screven County Seminole County Stephens County Stewart County Sumter County Talbot County Taliaferro County Tattnall County Taylor County Telfair County Terrell County Toombs County Towns County Treutlen County Turner County Twiggs County Union County Upson County Warren County
Total population
Age distribution
Income in 1999 below poverty level
Under 18 years
65 years and over
Percent of population for whom poverty status is determined
Population 1619
Number
Percent
Number
Percent Percent not
of
enrolled in
Related
65
families high school
Percent
All ages
children years under 18 and
and not a high school
years
over
graduate
3,766
1103.44
29.3
419
11.1
19.9
26
22.7
15.8
18.7
15,374
4289.35
27.9
2,155
14
20.1
22.4
25.5
15.5
3.8
9,369
2454.68
26.2
1,477
15.8
23.2
35.1
18.6
15.8
13
25,435
5977.23
23.5
3,971
15.6
15.1
17.3
18.6
11.3
16.4
5,252
1307.75
24.9
973
18.5
22.2
30.4
21.9
17.2
18.8
33,200
9229.60
27.8
4,095
12.3
21.4
32.3
16.8
17.6
12.5
6,498
1572.52
24.2
937
14.4
24.2
39.1
19.7
19.9
6.8
2,077
500.56
24.1
393
18.9
23.4
30.3
23.4
22.3
20.2
22,305
5107.85
22.9
2,506
11.2
23.9
32.9
20.2
18.6
24.9
8,815
2371.24
26.9
1,169
13.3
26
33.9
24.7
20.2
24.3
11,794
2653.65
22.5
1,755
14.9
21.2
26.4
23.7
17.3
24.5
10,970
3115.48
28.4
1,425
13
28.6
40.5
22
22.7
18.4
26,067
7455.16
28.6
3,178
12.2
23.9
33.8
18.3
17.8
20.6
9,319
1519.00
16.3
2,409
25.9
11.8
13.6
10.4
8.8
3.2
6,854
1782.04
26
908
13.2
26.3
31.8
33
20.8
23.1
9,504
2794.18
29.4
1,230
12.9
26.7
35.8
24.8
20.5
11.6
10,590
2859.30
27
1,196
11.3
19.7
25.2
25.8
15.5
19.1
17,289
3457.80
20
3,728
21.6
12.5
13.1
15.9
9.3
6.4
27,597
7037.24
25.5
4,123
14.9
14.7
21.7
11.7
11.2
13.9
6,336
1672.70
26.4
1,017
16.1
27
36
27.5
24.1
19.2
Education
Population 25 years and over
Employment
Civilian labor force (16 years and older)
Percent with less than a 9th
grade education
Percent high school
graduate or higher
Percent unemployed
8.4
70
5.7
14.2
66.9
9.4
13.4
67.9
7
11.4
71.1
4.2
17.3
63.2
10.1
10.8
69.9
6.8
13
64.8
8.7
21.4
56.2
9.8
11.7
66.3
6.8
15
63.6
8
10.3
63.6
6.5
11.8
64.5
8.5
11.4
67.3
5.7
10.2
75.1
3.8
14.9
61.8
9.4
10.5
67.7
8
13
63.2
8.3
9.1
74.2
3.2
12.4
66.7
7
20
57.1
9.4
187
Geographic area
Washington County Wayne County Webster County Wheeler County White County Wilcox County Wilkes County Wilkinson County Worth County
Total population
Age distribution
Income in 1999 below poverty level
Under 18 years
65 years and over
Percent of population for whom poverty status is determined
Population 1619
Number
Percent
Number
Percent Percent not
of
enrolled in
Related
65
families high school
Percent
All ages
children years under 18 and
and not a high school
years
over
graduate
21,176
5696.34
26.9
2,671
12.6
22.9
30
23.2
18.7
13.2
26,565
6880.34
25.9
3,017
11.4
16.7
22.7
14.4
13.4
11.8
2,390
602.28
25.2
353
14.8
19.3
26
19.4
17.2
24.5
6,179
1384.10
22.4
782
12.7
25.3
30.2
26.7
21.6
18
19,944
4627.01
23.2
2,902
14.6
10.5
12.3
15.4
8.4
10.1
8,577
1955.56
22.8
1,162
13.5
21
29.8
21.3
16.8
8.2
10,687
2564.88
24
1,832
17.1
17.5
24.2
19.9
13
13.4
10,220
2779.84
27.2
1,334
13.1
17.9
24.9
18
14.6
11.4
21,967
6282.56
28.6
2,629
12
18.5
25
20.2
14.7
5.1
Education
Population 25 years and over
Employment
Civilian labor force (16 years and older)
Percent with less than a 9th
grade education
Percent high school
graduate or higher
Percent unemployed
11.8
68.3
9.5
11.1
70.1
5
16.3
61.3
7.5
15.4
67.9
5
9
76
2.8
14.3
68.2
4.9
12.7
65
4.4
9.7
70.4
6.7
10.8
68.3
7.2
188
189
Mortality Data
190
Appling Atkinson Bacon Baker Banks Ben Hill Berrien Bleckley Brantley Brooks Bryan Burke Butts Calhoun Candler Charlton Chattahoochee Chattooga Clay Clinch Cook Crawford Crisp Dade Dawson Decatur Dodge Dooly
AGE ADJUSTED MORTALITY DATA, ALL RURAL COUNTIES
Cancer, All Types
Diabetes
Infant Mortality
1994
1999
2005
1994
1999
2005
1994
1999
2005
291.6 181.1
217.3
*
*
38.7
21.1
*
*
289.1 146.4
281.3
*
0
*
*
*
*
249.1 262.4
180.5
*
*
*
0
*
29.6
140.5 190.1
123.3
*
*
*
*
0
0
270.6 202.9
271.9
*
*
50.3
*
0
*
247.5 296.9
241.2
51.3
32.5
*
18.5
*
20.6
232
258.2
190.5
*
*
*
*
*
*
264.8 294.7
231.2
*
*
*
*
*
*
296.6
165
240.5
*
*
*
0
0
*
170.3 186.7
208.7
*
*
0
*
*
*
259.4 205.1
241.1
*
*
*
*
*
0
238.5 204.3
230.6
*
*
35.8
12.3
*
11.8
299.7 227.4
172.3
*
*
35.1
*
*
*
186
178.1
244.7
*
*
*
0
*
*
203.3 193.5
159
*
*
*
*
*
*
319.3 272.5
134.7
*
*
*
*
*
0
321.3 258.8
199
0
0
0
*
0
*
221.9
213
249.3
*
*
27.7
17.2
*
17.4
174.2 229.5
209.4
*
*
*
*
*
*
270.1 240.3
258.1
*
*
*
*
*
*
132.1 219.4
205.9
*
*
47.6
*
20.8
*
149.7 129.8
264.9
*
53.5
*
*
0
*
258.7 198.8
188.1
*
*
39.3
21.2
*
*
91.4
214.7
224.7
*
*
*
*
0
*
233.9 238.3
208.1
*
*
*
*
*
*
244.6 269.4
174.3
28.5
32.2
37.1
15.4
15.6
*
218.1 205.5
197
*
40.2
*
*
*
19.2
298.6 186.4
198.1
*
*
46
*
*
*
Cardiovascular Disease
1994 1999 2005
440.3 439.4 305.8
555.9 476.9 314.7
610.1 553.6 390.6
453.5 518.3 166.4
507
383.8 410.3
548.9 518.2 416.8
427.9 502.4 333.8
401.3 460.4 293.1
491.4
407
299.5
428.9 393.2 449.2
241.4 408.5 445.9
579.9 431.6 540.4
486.5 426.1 262.1
550.4 429.2 352.9
358.1 425.2 306.1
452.7 471.5 349.8
900.3 960.6 288.2
591.9
449
353.9
513.6 607.9 314.2
464.1 492.4 464.6
538.5
489
393.3
278.3 384.6 156.2
433.4
394
388.3
412.6 362.5 265.1
381.8 324.1 321.7
527.3
508
296.9
446.8 469.1
340
440
337
459.2
*No data available. Rates are per 100,000 population for cancer, diabetes, and cardiovascular disease and per 1,000 for infant conditions.
191
Early Echols Elbert Emanuel Evans Fannin Franklin Gilmer Glascock Grady Greene Hancock Haralson Harris Hart Heard Irwin Jasper Jeff Davis Jefferson Jenkins Johnson Jones Lamar Lanier Lee Liberty Lincoln Long Lumpkin
1994 222.1
* 253 206.7 211.6 188.2 158.7 266.3 171.3 201.6 255.2 261.5 169.6 214.4 234.9 187.4 289.9 190.5 246.4 240 270.1 330.1 238.1 243.3 240.7 319.4 234.5 180.6 204.2 176.1
Age Adjusted Mortality Rates, General Population
Cancer, All Types
Diabetes
Infant Mortality
1999
2005
1994
1999
2005 1994 1999 2005
157.9
227.1
43.7
62.2
*
*
*
0
*
276.3
0
*
0
*
*
*
200.3
196.4
*
24.9
39.5 23.5
*
20.3
201.8
201.6
*
0
22.7
*
26 12.8
215.6
141.2
*
*
*
*
*
*
172.9
198.1
47.4
33.8
54.4
0
*
*
178.2
164.3
31.7
*
50.5
*
*
*
215.7
188.2
*
*
41
0
0
*
191.4
*
*
*
*
0
0
0
245.4
271.8
*
*
25.5
*
21
*
140.4
172.8
*
*
*
33.7
*
*
219.5
196.6
*
*
53.4
*
*
*
213.3
176.2
34.7
22.8
19.8
*
0
*
181.3
207.1
38.5
26.2
23.5
*
*
*
183.9
165.7
*
0
25.6
*
*
0
201.2
267.6
*
*
*
0
*
*
116.8
224.2
*
*
*
*
0
0
228.9
196.3
*
*
*
*
*
*
152.9
261.6
*
43.7
44.4
*
0
*
222.1
269.9
30.3
68.1
31.6
*
*
*
120.6
189.6
*
*
*
*
*
0
173.6
223.6
*
0
*
*
*
0
256.2
192
34.8
*
17.9
*
15.2
*
224.2
242.6
*
0
*
*
*
0
214.1
219.4
*
*
*
*
*
*
217.1
149.5
*
*
24
*
0
*
200.2
239.8
30.7
*
48.6 14.3 11.8 10.2
256
204.5
*
55.1
*
*
*
*
270.5
315.3
0
*
*
*
*
*
195.8
190.8
*
44.9
64.6
*
*
0
Cardiovascular Disease
1994 1999 2005
495.8 449.1 418.4
527.1 525.5 257.9
346.6 454.5 361.5
427.6 423.8 398.3
622.5 405.2 285
371.7 279 287.2
445.8 377.2 295
410.2 423.1 329.9
378.6 357.7 334.1
412.5 386.1 396.9
541.5 462.5 366.4
515.3 486.9 398.6
444.4 463.7 404.2
430.2 321 284.1
428.2 442.8 377.3
531.6 383.4 293.9
482 307.2 330.7
477 500.8 357.9
438.1 565.3 542.6
562.6 406.8 308.9
652 516.5 354
421.6 427.1 369.9
407.1 466.8 356.2
452.2 394.9 373.1
479.1 182.2 230.3
315.4 257.1 262.9
371.6 583.9 293
411.7 376.6 353.4
509
523 374.3
383.3 313.2 281.2
192
Macon Madison Marion McDuffie McIntosh Meriwether Miller Mitchell Monroe Montgomery Morgan Oconee Oglethorpe Peach Pickens Pierce Pike Pulaski Putnam Quitman Rabun Randolph Schley Screven Seminole Stephens Stewart Sumter Talbot
1994 191.2 214.6 172.6 196.4 259.9 216.6 139.8 213.7 221.2 300.7 208.5 154.5 219 217.9 148.7 247.3 167.8 208 227.4 477.8 172 249.7 351 246.7 169.9 196.6 168.7 212.6 172.3
Age Adjusted Mortality Rates, General Population
Cancer, All Types
Diabetes
Infant Mortality
1999
2005
1994
1999
2005 1994 1999 2005
204.3
160.3
*
*
66.2
*
*
*
197.3
183.2
*
40.9
26.3
*
*
0
158
240.5
*
*
*
*
0
*
258.6
219.2
*
*
70.1
*
*
*
206.3
234.7
*
*
*
*
*
*
194.9
205.5
*
*
48.3 17.9
*
*
172.8
199.9
*
*
*
0
*
*
255.1
211.7
23.8
26.2
*
*
*
18
190.2
226.2
*
40.2
37.9
*
*
*
256
254.1
0
*
*
0
*
*
179.7
168.6
*
*
*
0
*
*
201
188.8
*
35.9
*
*
*
*
141.3
152.9
*
*
*
0
0
*
307.3
158.3
30.6
48.1
29.3 25.4
*
*
153.9
171.3
*
*
*
*
16.8
*
249.4
188.4
*
42.1
43
*
*
0
233.6
232.5
0
*
*
*
0
*
247.1
207
*
*
52.2
*
0
0
167.3
116.8
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
360.3
*
0
0
0
*
*
175.7
197.3
*
*
25.8
0
*
0
254.7
190.5
*
*
*
*
39.7
*
220.4
272.9
0
0
*
0
*
0
198.4
197.9
*
0
48.4
*
*
*
177.8
172.1
62
0
88.8
*
*
*
184.9
193.1
*
17.3
*
*
*
*
157.9
200.8
*
69.7
*
*
0
*
210.3
202.5
19.3
31.2
26.9 16.1
*
11.4
220.7
156
*
*
*
0
*
*
Cardiovascular Disease 1994 1999 2005 494.7 408.2 543.9 457.3 468 362.7 436.8 439.3 496.7 361.5 475.2 360.1 378.9 427.4 269.8 517.7 469 508.1 426.5 463.5 225.7 454.7 399.1 424.7 463.3 415.2 397.8 367.6 556.9 508.2 489.5 517.8 332.1 318.4 387.2 373.5 380.9 459.5 462.5 349.9 504.9 338.6 460 411.7 388.2 498.5 575.2 261.8 534.4 391.3 297 470.7 432.3 413.6 494.1 429.9 240.7 623.8 347.6 236 262.8 332 222.5 469 528.6 393 302.6 369.9 571.8 479.1 459.2 317.6 563.3 426.7 339 408.6 471.6 311.3 417.4 323 361.5 376.8 419.4 269.8 503.2 467.6 468.4
193
Taliaferro Tattnall Taylor Telfair Terrell Toombs Towns Treutlen Turner Twiggs Union Upson Warren Washington Wayne Webster Wheeler White Wilcox Wilkes Wilkinson Worth Rural* Urban Georgia
1994 192.8 241.5 204.8 186.8 218.5 238.6 198.5 179.5 126.4 158.8 263.2 213.5 222.3 213.5 238.3 340.2 169.3 195.9 236 152 224 207.4 218.3 211.3 212.7
Age Adjusted Mortality Rates, General Population
Cancer, All Types
Diabetes
Infant Mortality
1999
2005
1994
1999
2005 1994 1999 2005
*
384.6
*
0
*
*
*
0
218.6
280.6
*
*
*
*
*
*
178.6
335.3
*
*
65.7
0
*
0
255.9
189.2
*
73.6
0
*
*
*
303.7
250.9
*
*
*
*
*
0
250.6
264.9
*
*
*
16.2 11
*
163.8
262.4
*
*
*
0
*
0
171.1
213.7
*
*
*
*
0
*
239
168.8
*
62.7
*
0
*
*
226.1
141.6
*
0
*
*
*
*
149.1
232.8
*
*
*
*
*
0
198.1
196.8
*
25.2
37.6
*
*
*
247.8
295.5
*
*
65.2
*
*
*
204
287.6
*
*
21.9 18.1
*
*
193.2
194.3
*
*
*
*
*
19.7
404.8
*
0
*
0
0
0
0
147.5
159.9
*
106.3
*
*
0
*
176.2
172.8
*
24.2
24.8
*
*
*
238.4
177.4
*
*
*
*
*
0
237.3
162
44.7
68.7
*
*
*
*
169.9
122.5
*
*
*
*
*
*
157
207
*
26.3
26.9 17.1
*
*
205.3
203.8
19.7
23.5
27.3 11.9 9.8 9.4
199.5
182
19.1
23
21.7 9.8 7.9 7.7
200.5
186.6
19.2
23.1
23 10.1 8.2
8
Cardiovascular Disease 1994 1999 2005 521.4 362.6 421.1 473.1 450.2 342.1 602.4 437.1 216.3 550.8 492.5 504.9 364.4 517.8 384.9 430.5 522.4 398.9 248.7 352.4 202.7 616.4 529.6 372.4 485.4 447.3 407.2 353.1 421.4 419.1 389.6 359.3 231.6 544.4 482.4 495.5 462 466.6 427.5 451.4 459.4 337.4 446.8 450.4 408 349 537.9 306.3 307.2 474 356.1 359.2 391.5 247.1 354.4 398 373.5 402.3 303.8 358.3 508.3 531 397.9 513.3 429.8 294.2 447.6 428.9 348 400 380.9 295.8 411.9 392.1 307.7
Source: May 2007 Georgia Department of Human Resources, Division of Public Health, Office of Health Information and Policy *Rural composite rate as calculated by the Georgia Division of Public Health does not include Liberty County
194
\
Morbidity Rates
195
Appling Atkinson Bacon Baker Banks Ben Hill Berrien Bleckley Brantley Brooks Bryan Burke Butts Calhoun Candler Charlton Chattahoochee Chattooga Clay Clinch Cook Crawford Crisp Dade Dawson Decatur
MORBIDITY RATES, ALL RURAL COUNTIES
Cancer, all types
Diabetes
Infant conditions
1999
2005
1999
2005
1999
2005
271.3
345.3
138.5
217.2
28.9
94.7
264
311.3
158.4
286.4
*
124.5
417.8
260.1
288.5
356.5
69.6
57.8
220.1
192.6
*
*
*
0
249.3
317.7
128.2
193.1
*
*
411.1
294.5
171.3
196.4
62.8
144.4
273.5
281.3
167.8
227.4
68.4
59.9
362.9
263.6
138.3
230.6
51.8
82.4
264.5
238.8
76.6
135.6
62.6
*
317.5
281.7
152.6
287.9
*
42.9
280.8
255.7
133.9
98.1
*
52.5
347.5
283.3
234.7
261.8
45.1
68.7
264.2
299.4
121.5
128.3
47.6
47.5
388.6
318.2
259.1
368.4
*
*
272.8
203.5
251.8
213.2
52.5
48.4
195
166.8
87.7
120.5
*
0
88
74.9
33.8
68.1
40.6
*
298.1
319.9
139.1
135.5
23.8
*
149.4
*
149.4
0
149.4
*
362.7
328.8
203.1
271.6
*
*
334.1
372.7
282.7
201.6
70.7
79.4
226.4
225.3
88.9
108.7
*
*
328.8
331.6
141.6
349.7
45.7
54.5
86.5
130.9
53.2
68.6
*
0
302.6
228.1
78.9
91.2
39.5
30.4
288.6
269.1
260.1
216.6
67.7
52.4
Cardiovascular disease
1999
2005
1,766.40 1,804.60
1,161.70 1,481.90
1,780.60 1,917.30
1,271.70 1,131.40
1,731.10 1,607.00
1,992.50 2,027.00
1,945.80 1,741.70
2,099.70 2,158.00
1,510.20 1,342.70
1,978.10 1,659.80
1,097.20 1,089.40
1,588.70 1,832.70
1,611.50 1,815.20
1,781.10 1,657.70
2,088.10 1,773.10
818.9
519
257.1
292.9
2,233.90 1,844.20
866.4
431.8
1,581.50 1,386.50
2,306.80 1,955.30
1,342.10 1,809.80
2,064.40 2,230.10
385.9
280.5
1,374.70 1,368.40
1,257.90 1,355.80
*No data available. Rates are per 100,000 population for cancer, diabetes, and cardiovascular disease and per 1,000 for infant conditions.
196
Dodge Dooly Early Echols Elbert Emanuel Evans Fannin Franklin Gilmer Glascock Grady Greene Hancock Haralson Harris Hart Heard Irwin Jasper Jeff Davis Jefferson Jenkins Johnson Jones Lamar Lanier
Cancer, all types
1999
2005
282.1 296.3
226.9 306.4
89.4
149.3
253.3 258.6
416.2 264.4
303
343.8
262.4 253.4
354.9 287.8
314.7 324.2
375.7 267.1
273.2 221.8
331
331.1
373.3 414.2
309.4 248.9
288.5 352.9
222.4 277.2
342.8 299.6
353.9 299.7
316.6 257.6
357.9 273.8
349
359.2
403.6 277.7
246.8 217.7
315.8 293.6
320
234.8
333.5 366.3
390.5
331
Morbidity Rates, General Population
Diabetes
Infant conditions
1999
2005
1999
2005
240.3
260.5
52.2
46
314.1
289.4
96
68.1
170.6
132.7
89.4
*
*
*
0
117.6
176.3
235.6
49
24
243.3
239.7
78
67.8
291.6
183.5
58.3
87.4
138.9
132.5
25.7
*
169.8
152.8
69.9
64.8
116.3
80.5
53.7
65.8
*
184.8
0
0
161.2
167.6
46.7
69.5
309.9
216.7
*
38.2
319.3
217.8
*
72.6
166
123.5
83
52.9
115.5
86.4
29.9
25.2
180.2
174.7
35.2
29.1
149
158.6
*
*
265.5
208.1
*
*
143.2
106.5 116.3
53.2
182.4
221.7 134.8
38.2
305.6
307.2
28.8
35.4
270.3
320.8
82.3
0
140.3
157.3
*
*
128
119.2
34.1
18.6
128.3
164.9
*
*
209.2
238.3
*
*
Cardiovascular disease
1999
2005
2,351.20 2,171.20
2,294.70 2,153.40
755.4
870.9
956.9
822.9
1,953.50 2,283.80
2,116.20 2,257.10
2,361.70 1,870.10
2,113.90 1,813.90
2,312.60 1,778.60
1,936.80 1,547.50
2,029.70 2,181.10
1,251.70 1,132.20
1,500.10 1,637.70
1,676.50 1,783.70
1,885.30 1,919.70
1,137.60 1,238.30
2,017.20 1,651.70
1,508.80 1,524.80
2,052.50 1,941.90
1,574.70 1,627.70
1,887.50 1,918.50
1,781.80 2,174.20
2,173.90 1,924.60
1,496.90 2,075.90
1,621.40 1,751.40
1,776.40 1,990.50
1,924.70 1,707.90
197
Lee Liberty Lincoln Long Lumpkin Macon Madison Marion McDuffie McIntosh Meriwether Miller Mitchell Monroe Montgomery Morgan Oconee Oglethorpe Peach Pickens Pierce Pike Pulaski Putnam Quitman Rabun Randolph Schley
Cancer, all types
1999
2005
152
192.9
129.1 192.9
336.8 341.2
59.4
261.7
326.1 308.3
221
276.5
300
249.2
185.2 276.1
339.4 280.6
338.8 352.4
360
240
296.9 433.5
300.7 357.3
420
378.4
243.5 235.7
366.6
343
347.2 248.8
471.1 220.4
351.2 278.3
325.1 369.2
363.9 227.8
353.1 241.8
380.6 328.6
310.7 327.8
*
202.7
385.2 391.6
345
383
485.7 291.1
Morbidity Rates, General Population
Diabetes
Infant conditions
1999
2005
1999
2005
82.2
96.5
*
*
71
100.8
67.8
71.2
144.4
207.1
*
0
89
126.3
49.5
*
102.2
90.4
*
28.8
206.7
320.1
42.8
*
130.3
205.2
39.5
44
114
151.8
99.7
82.8
155.6
188.6
33
32.2
131.8
162.6
84.7
*
208.9
174.5
*
56.7
171.9
208.7
*
*
144
100.9
55
67.3
177.3
176.6
23.3
*
158.2
134.7
73
*
150.6
120.1
52.4
40
109.2
74
27.3
*
162.4
147
*
44.1
184.2
104.9
21.4
44.4
132.8
84.4
41.2
70.3
156
169.4
*
*
97.7
105.4
60.1
49.6
296
246.5
*
51.4
128.6
176.5
48.2
45.4
*
202.7
*
0
128.4
149.2
*
49.7
230
301
115
68.4
161.9
*
0
0
Cardiovascular disease
1999
2005
875.3
861.8
579.2
745.5
2,273.50
2,120.10
840.9
739.9
1,547.70
1,471.80
1,995.90
2,102.60
1,953.90
1,601.40
925.9
1,132.00
1,734.90
1,683.30
1,515.30
1,508.90
1,662.10
1,788.90
1,390.80
1,685.90
1,274.60
1,492.20
1,334.60
1,778.40
1,448.60
1,717.40
1,505.80
1,429.20
1,248.20
1,116.00
1,705.70
1,543.10
1,867.40
1,710.10
1,401.10
1,715.80
1,897.70
1,606.40
1,547.50
1,506.70
2,421.20
2,434.00
2,003.50
1,860.90
858.4
324.3
1,831.30
1,591.30
1,597.00
1,641.60
1,861.80
1,649.70
198
Screven Seminole Stephens Stewart Sumter Talbot Taliaferro Tattnall Taylor Telfair Terrell Toombs Towns Treutlen Turner Twiggs Union Upson Warren Washington Wayne Webster Wheeler White Wilcox Wilkes Wilkinson
Cancer, all types
1999
2005
439.2 343.5
235.5 249.3
423.4 315.2
474.4 450.6
297.4 355.5
416.8 417.3
634.1 328.6
331.1 301.6
375.4 495.1
417.1 348.4
483.8 382.8
369
363
558.3 368.4
358.1 222.1
422.8 369.4
237
378.7
474.6
460
374.9 339.6
345.1 278.6
318.7
338
349.3 348.7
337.8 218.4
343.6 134.2
352.3 282.7
446.3 298.1
438.9 286.9
362.3 285.9
Morbidity Rates, General Population
Diabetes
Infant conditions
1999
2005
1999
2005
177
259.2 124.5
32.4
267.6
238.5
53.5
*
158.3
231.4
83.1
127.7
322.6
348.2 132.8
*
233.6
221.8 115.3
51.7
169.8
208.7
*
0
*
328.6
*
*
204.1
206.8
68
51.7
182
135
*
*
246.9
265.1
76.6
*
264.7
252.1
45.6
84
196
146.7
57.7
80.7
87.6
155.1
*
*
74.6
222.1
*
*
243.1
73.9
*
73.9
142.2
155.4
*
*
189.8
85.9
29.7
30.3
291.2
180.6
29.1
68.6
109.8
295
*
*
176
198.8
57.1
79.5
193.6
221.9
79.7
45.8
*
*
*
*
163.6
238.6
*
74.6
124.3
83.1
*
29.1
234.9
172
94
80.3
242.8
200.8
56
*
186.1
167.6
*
49.3
Cardiovascular disease
1999
2005
2,156.50
1,827.60
1,284.40
1,073.10
2,188.40
2,198.70
1,840.60
1,884.50
1,650.60
1,382.50
1,837.00
1,669.40
1,951.20
2,793.00
1,551.10
1,663.00
2,081.90
2,126.70
3,362.60
2,809.50
1,807.60
1,540.50
1,725.90
1,891.90
2,638.20
2,074.60
1,805.40
2,428.60
1,553.90
1,741.60
1,431.60
2,000.20
2,355.00
1,941.20
2,442.40
2,344.70
2,054.90
2,081.60
1,650.30
1,700.00
2,057.70
2,078.20
1,478.00
1,266.90
2,258.20
1,774.50
1,999.70
1,754.30
2,137.40
2,132.80
2,138.60
2,562.90
2,076.00
2,001.40
199
Worth Rural Urban Georgia
Cancer, all types
1999
2005
262.8 304.6
323.2 298.4
251
236.2
265.2 247.8
Morbidity Rates, General Population
Diabetes
Infant conditions
1999
2005
1999 2005
226.6
154.6
68
31.8
173.3
173.5
48
44.9
115
117.2
27.7
28.5
126.5
127.7
31.7
31.5
Source: May 2007 Georgia Department of Human Resources, Division of Public Health, Office of Health Information and Policy *Rural composite rate as calculated by the Georgia Division of Public Health does not include Liberty County.
Cardiovascular disease
1999
2005
1,486.40
1,363.90
1,731.00
1,685.8
1,127.80
1,141.1
1,246.40
1242.7
200
Appendix D - Maps
Maps provided by the Georgia Department of Community Health are current as of March 2007. Please check the Georgia Department of Community Health Web site
(http://www.dch.Georgia.gov) for updates.
202
203
204
Health Status by County, Georgia, 2003
Dade Catoosa
Murray
Whitfield
Walker
Fannin Gilmer
Chattooga
Gordon
Pickens
Towns Union
Rabun
White
Lumpkin
Habersham Stephens
Dawson
Hall
Banks Franklin
Floyd
Bartow Cherokee Forsyth
Hart
Jackson
Madison Elbert
Health Status Excellent 76-100 Good 53-75 Fair 37-52 Poor 0-36
Georgia Health Status Score: 54.7
Polk Haralson
Cobb
Gwinnett
Paulding
DeKalb
Douglas Fulton
Rockdale
Barrow Walton
Clarke Oglethorpe
Oconee
Wilkes
Lincoln
Carroll
Clayton
Newton Morgan Greene Taliaferro
Columbia
Heard
Henry
Fayette
Coweta
Butts Spalding
Jasper
Putnam Hancock
McDuffie
Warren
Richmond
Glascock
Troup
Pike Meriwether
Lamar Monroe
Jones
Baldwin
Jefferson Washington
Burke
Harris
Upson Talbot
Bibb Crawford
Wilkinson Twiggs
Johnson
Jenkins Screven
Muscogee Marion Chattahoochee
Taylor
Peach Houston
Macon
Bleckley
Emanuel
Laurens Treutlen
Bulloch
Candler
Effingham
Schley Stewart Webster Sumter
Quitman
Randolph Terrell
Lee
Dooly Pulaski
Crisp
Wilcox
Dodge
Montgomery
Wheeler
Toombs
Evans
Telfair
Tattnall
Bryan
Turner
Ben Hill
Jeff Davis Appling
Liberty Long
Chatham
Clay Calhoun Dougherty
Early
Baker
Miller
Mitchell
Worth
Irwin Tift
Coffee
Colquitt
Berrien Cook
Atkinson
Bacon
Wayne
Pierce
Ware
Brantley
McIntosh Glynn
Seminole Decatur
Grady Thomas
Brooks
Lanier
Clinch
Lowndes
Echols
Charlton
Camden
Prepared by: G.E. Alan Dever, Ph.D., M.T., M.D. (Hon.) & Leah Smith, M.P.H. Mercer University- Health Sciences Center
Data Source: Inforum, 2004
205
206
207
208
209
210
211
212
213
214
215
216
217
218
219