This section provides tools on how to access information about health within your community as well on how to measure the effects that the built environment has on certain health issues.
Design for Health Materials:
Health Impact Assessments: This series offers a variety of HIA tools to identify and evaluate the effects of policies, plans, programs, and design on health. These can be specifically tailored to consider the needs of specialized populations.
Key Question Research Summaries: this series provides short and digestible summaries about what research says and doesn't say on topics relevant to the comprehensive planning process
Comprehensive Plan Review Checklists: These Plan Review Checklists summarize the key points of the Design for Health background and health impact assessment materials. Topics match the plan elements required by the Twin Cities Metropolitan Council.
Transportation, Pedestrian and Bicycle Plan Checklist: This checklist for transportation, pedestrian and Bicycle Plans can be used to evaluate how well health has been incorporated and helps to identify additional opportunities to incorporate health into these plans.
Information Sources for Health
The following web sitesare some of the resources available for finding health statistics and health facilities information.
Health Statistics
Minnesota Department of Health: The MN department of health has a wide range of statistics including:
Vital Statistics State and Trends
This site includes an instruction document and a highly formatted excel workbook of basic demographic data, birth data (including premature births, prenatal case, infant deaths), and death data (major causes, age adjusted rates, ethnic breakdown).
Minnesota County Health Tables
These tables contains data on demographics; births and related infant health issues; deaths and causes of death; diseases, medical professionals, and health related behaviors (under morbidity and utilization and under chemical health); and environmental health (e.g. lead poisoning). Diseases range from mumps to Lyme disease and lung cancer; behaviors include seat belt use and driving under the influence.
Fee-based Statistical Requests
For a fee, the Center for Health Statistics will fulfill specific requests pertaining to state and county vital statistics data not readily available in the Center's Minnesota Health Statistics Annual Summary or Minnesota County Health Tables.
Centers for Disease Control: The CDC has a wealth of information including some statistics:
GIS shape files for metropolitan areas and states are available at http://www.cdc.gov/BRFSS/maps/gis_data.htm
Health Facilities
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