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Richmond County ranked among unhealthiest counties
by Laura Edington
Richmond County Daily Journal

A new study has ranked Richmond County as one of the unhealthiest counties in North Carolina.

The University of Wisconsin, in collaboration with the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, released the rankings based on 25 health factors. These factors measured adult obesity, adult smoking, drinking, motor vehicle crash death rate, high school graduation, unemployment, children in poverty, children in single-parent households, access to healthy foods and access to recreational facilities. According to Tommy Jarrell, director of the Richmond County Health Department, this is an annual report that studies all of the counties across the nation.

Richmond County ranked 89 out of the 100 counties in North Carolina.

“I think the bottom line is that it does reinforce, to all of us, that our health is affected by all of these factors,” Jarrell said.

“These 25 factors have a direct impact on the health in our community, we can’t ignore any of them. We have to work to continually address these problems,” he said.

The study found in Richmond County, 28 percent of the population smokes, and adult obesity sits at 32 percent.

The percentage of uninsured in Richmond County is 22 percent and, according to the study, there were 108 preventable hospital stays. The percentage of children living in poverty in Richmond County is 38 percent, that is one point more than Columbus County where child poverty is at 37 percent. Both of these numbers are higher than the statewide percentage which is 25 percent.

Roxanne Elliott, policy director with FirstHealth Community Health Services, said the results don’t surprise her. She said the Health Summit, held on Feb. 5, showed some of the same data as this health study. The Richmond County Health Summit was a collaborative effort of Community Care of the Sandhills, Richmond County Health Department, UNC School of Public Health and FirstHealth of the Carolinas.

“The health of Richmond County has a lot of room for improvements,” Elliott said. She pointed out that Richmond County offers a lot of programs geared towards healthy living and helping those who are uninsured, but residents aren’t participating in them.

Jarrell said that although the rank is not a great one, it is a slight improvement from last year’s rank of 90. “That’s not a vast improvement, but it is a little improvement,” he said.

“How do we come together as a community to really move the needle forward on population health,” Elliott asked.

Some of the healthy living programs are Bridge to Wellness, FirstHealth Cares, Medical Access Plan, FirstQuit Tobacco Program, Mobile Health Services, Children’s Dental Clinic, FirstNavistar, Mobile Health Services, People Living Active Year-Round, Compassionate Care Clinic, HealthNet, Pharmacy Assistance Program, Diabetes and Nutrition Education Center, Richmond County Cooperative Extension, Stanford Chronic Disease Management Classes, The Happy Kitchen and Transportation.

Wake County ranked number one in the study and Columbus County ranked 100.

— Staff Writer Laura Edington can be reached at 910-997-3111, ext. 18, or by email at ledington@civitasmedia.com.

NOTE: The original article had an error that has been corrected. This article is the correct version. We apologize for this mistake.

 


Comments
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March 23, 2013
why is it up to the 'leaders' how to make the citizens healthy. in fact they are not leaderS At All, But rather elected officials doing the public's Business. a person's help is up to that person. walk around the block and still instead of sitting in front of the TV.. cook some vegetables at home instead of going to fast food.. get involved in promoting healthy lifestyles instead of pointing fingers at other people.. Richmond County issue is not that it's unhealthy, is that there are too many people complaining and not enough people doing..
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March 22, 2013
So sad. Weak commentary from the County's director of health. Hey, what's the problem? Richmond County's not the worse, and better than last year.

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March 22, 2013
I know that County Leaders do not fall into any of these negative categories mentioned in the article. Lots of people that live in this county do but, one would think how in the world are we so bad off and unhealthy. Well another question is these "leaders" have been our commissioners for pretty much my entire life in this county and they have done nothing to educate our citizens. Offer educational opportunities to our people to give them the knowledge to overcome these issues and please take some pride in the county that you have been the "leaders" of for so long that you will do anything necessary to get the negative stigma off of this county. Stop complaining about the people that live here and help them. You are LEADERS that must take pride in your elected positions. I hope that you are embarrassed to be last in all the wrong areas and first in all the wrong areas because you are the face of the county. You have all made out like fat cats in this county running your businesses taking our money and nothing else. We cannot even ask questions at the meeting unless it is something ya'll will allow on tv. You are not kings but only leaders of the poorest, most out of shape, lowest readers, highest teen pregnancy county in the state.
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