From the Minnesota Department of Health
The Minnesota Department of Health (MDH), in collaboration with the Healthy Minnesota Partnership, has published the Minnesota Statewide Health Assessment that provides a snapshot of health in Minnesota.
The report focuses on how different factors impact health, including the environment, education, housing, transportation, social circles and more. It compiles and uses data and information from over 400 data sources and scientific literature.
The assessment shows that Minnesota’s health is positively impacted by things like access to nature, good health care facilities and strong civic participation. But, even within these areas, inequities persist. Not every community has the same opportunities to be healthy.
“Minnesota is a place that values health, opportunity, belonging and nature, and this statewide health assessment shows that,” Minnesota Commissioner of Health Dr. Brooke Cunningham said. “But we know it’s not just the presence or absence of disease or injury that defines health. The places we live and the environment around us play a role as well, and we can see in the data that it’s easier for some groups and communities to be healthier than others.”
The Healthy Minnesota Partnership, a collaboration of MDH and community partners, will use the assessment, done every five years, to create a statewide health improvement framework, set priorities and make recommendations.
“This assessment helps update the roadmap we’re using to inform our work and address these disparities in data- and community-driven ways,” Commissioner Cunningham said. “Working together, change is possible. We have a lot of great momentum coming out of a historic legislative session in 2023 and a shared goal with the rest of the Walz-Flanagan administration to make Minnesota the best state for children and families.”
This report is also one of the first statewide health assessments in the nation done after the COVID-19 pandemic. While COVID-19 is not the main focus, the assessment does include some data about COVID-19 and acknowledges that COVID-19 had a significant impact on health. The assessment notes that COVID-19 was the third leading cause of death in Minnesota in both 2020 and 2021. In 2020, it accounted for 10 percent of all deaths, behind heart disease (16 percent) and cancer (19 percent).
Before vaccines and treatments were developed, during the fall surge in 2020, a smaller number of infections caused a much higher rate of hospitalization and death in Minnesota, according to the assessment. As vaccines and treatments became widely available, hospitalization and death rates declined sharply during the surge in cases between fall 2021 and early spring 2022, highlighting the value of vaccination and treatments in preventing severe illness. One of the outcomes of the pandemic was that people ages 65 and older who were vaccinated were much less likely to be hospitalized or die compared to people who were not vaccinated. The risk of hospitalization and death was reduced even more for people over age 65 who stayed up to date on their vaccines by receiving the regularly recommended doses.