America’s Health Rankings 2021 Annual Report Illustrates Complex Picture of America’s Health
The United Health Foundation released its 2021 Annual Report, highlighting the impacts of COVID-19 on U.S. health metrics. Key findings include a 17% increase in the U.S. death rate from 2019 to 2020, and a 13% rise in adults reporting high health status. However, breast and colon cancer screenings dropped by 17% and 23%, respectively. Public health funding rose by 33% per capita, the highest since 2015. The report serves as a vital tool for addressing health disparities and improving the nation's overall health during and post-pandemic.
- 13% increase in adults reporting high health status, reversing a downward trend.
- 33% increase in public health funding per person from 2017-2020, reaching $116.
- 17% increase in the U.S. death rate between 2019 and 2020.
- Declines in cancer screenings: 17% for breast cancer and 23% for colon cancer.
Report is first to include data collected during COVID-19 pandemic
“In this year’s report — which provides a comprehensive look at our nation’s overall health — we begin to see how the COVID-19 pandemic has had both direct and indirect impacts on health and health trends,” said Dr.
The most notable impact of COVID-19 in the report was a
Many other measures tell a more nuanced story, including:
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13% increase in high health status, the percentage of adults reporting that their health was very good or excellent, nationally between 2019 and 2020. This reverses a downward trend that began in 2012. In 2020, high health status was far higher among Asian (60.5% ) and white (59.2% ) adults than among American Indian/Alaska Native (43.5), Hispanic (46.5% ) and Black (47.7% ) adults. -
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7% decrease in the prevalence of cancer, which had increased9% between 2016 and 2019. However, screenings declined for breast cancer (17% ) and colon cancer (23% ) between 2019 and 2020, according to UnitedHealthcare data. -
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5% decrease nationally in the percentage of adults engaged in excessive drinking to17.6% , the lowest level since 2014, driven largely by a7% decrease in binge drinking — defined as four or more drinks for females or five or more drinks for males on one occasion in the past 30 days — between 2019 and 2020. Despite the decrease, heavy drinking — defined as eight or more drinks per week for females or 15 or more drinks per week for males — moved from6.5% to6.7% between 2019 and 2020.
The report also found that public health funding increased
“The pandemic has shown us how important it is to have a strong public health infrastructure to continue to address the challenges we face,” said
The 32nd edition of the Annual Report, available at AmericasHealthRankings.org, examines 81 measures from 30 unique data sources to understand the impact that social, economic, environmental and other factors have on health. In addition, the report includes the longest-running state-by-state analysis of our nation’s health, and provides actionable, data-driven insights that stakeholders can use to effect change, either in a state or nationally, and continue the dialogue of improving our nation’s health.
About America’s Health Rankings
For over three decades, America’s Health Rankings® has assessed the nation’s health and provided data-driven insights to support better health outcomes and build healthier communities. Produced by the
Learn more about UnitedHealth Group’s commitment to building a sustainable health care system in the company’s annual Sustainability Report.
About the
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