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BOH agenda 042617
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BOH agenda 042617
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BOH minutes 042617
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<br /> <br /> <br /> <br />Orange, Wake ranked as North Carolina's <br />healthiest counties in recent report <br />Erik Beene and Rebecca Ayers | Published 04/10/17 12:18am <br /> Wake and Orange counties are the healthiest counties in North Carolina, according to a recent <br />report. <br />The County Health Ranking report by the University of Wisconsin Population Health Institute and <br />the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation ranked Orange County No. 1 in health factors and No. 2 in <br />health outcomes. <br />Orange County Commissioner Penny Rich said she was excited by the report and the health <br />department’s progress. <br /> <br />“I’m actually really encouraged by the reports and only because our health department has been <br />doing such a good job thinking outside the box and challenging the norms to try and get our county <br />healthier,” she said. <br />The countywide ban on public smoking and focus on green spaces has contributed to the county’s <br />overall health, Rich said. <br />Rich said there’s not a better place to go out to hike, walk and enjoy the outdoors than Orange <br />County. <br />“We’ve kept a really good hold on preserving some of the beautiful parks that we have and we use <br />them,” Rich said. “And it’s good — it’s really good.” <br />Anna Schenck, director of the North Carolina Institute for Public Health, said the report did a good <br />job of showing the numerous social and environmental factors that contribute to health. The divide <br />between urban and rural communities in the ranking was also apparent, she said. <br />“It’s a combination from actors in education, income, health care access and lifestyle factors that will <br />make a person healthy or not and then those that congregate in counties that are wealthier,” she <br />said. “In North Carolina, we have a real divide in terms of the haves and the have-nots and the <br />wealthy counties.” <br />The report said Orange County ranks as one of the worst in the state in terms of income inequality. <br />Stacy Shelp, a spokesperson for the Orange County Health Department, said 30 percent of county <br />families do not earn a living wage.
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