On June 7, 2016

Vermont ranks second in the U.S. for senior health

By Erin Mansfield, VTDigger.org

A national research foundation has ranked Vermont second in the nation for keeping senior citizens healthy in 2016.

This is the fourth year in a row that the United Health Foundation’s “America’s Health Rankings” placed Vermont in the top five states for senior health. In 2016, the study ranked Massachusetts first and New Hampshire third, according to the Association for Health Care Journalists.

Vermont’s strengths in keeping senior citizens healthy are a low prevalence of smoking, a high enrollment in the Supplemental Nutritional Assistance Program, or food stamps, and an overall high health status, according to the report.

Vermont’s weaknesses for keeping senior citizens healthy include a low use of hospice care, a high prevalence of falling down, and a high prevalence of “excessive drinking,” according to the report.

Here are some other statistics cited in the report:

  • A decrease in the senior citizen smoking rate in the past year
  • An increase in food insecurity in the past year
  • A decrease in the number of hospitalizations for hip fractures in the past year
  • An increase in the need for geriatric doctors in the past two years
  • An increase in hospice care use in the past three years.

Do you want to submit feedback to the editor?

Send Us An Email!

Related Posts

Hartland Garden Club told to relocate annual plant sale from Damon Hall

May 1, 2024
The Hartland Garden Club (HGC) has run an annual plant sale for 25 years in front of Damon Hall, but new town manager John Broker-Campbell notified HGC president Dan Talbot the sale could not take place at Damon Hall on May 18 as planned. By Curt Peterson He cited a 1995 town “Vendors Ordinance” clearly…

The final two-week countdown

May 1, 2024
There are about two weeks left in Vermont’s 2024 Legislative Session. This is not a lot of time to negotiate policy differences between the House and the Senate. A great deal of policy work is still not settled, which concerns me. I am not a fan of the work that is often done in the…

Could be a bumpy ride?

May 1, 2024
The last few weeks of the legislative session often contain a bit of theater, eureka moments, surprises, and just plain old disagreements. With the legislature scheduled to adjourn on May 10, the next two weeks could prove interesting. Major legislation, such as the state budget, education property tax rates, higher electric costs related to the…

VHFA awards $40 million for affordable housing

April 24, 2024
Rutland and Woodstock are two of the five communities selected for apartment developments The Vermont Housing Finance Agency (VHFA) Board of Commissioners announced April 15, that its annual award of federal housing tax credits will support the construction of 156 in “perpetually affordable” apartment buildings in five communities across the state. The sale of this…