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MoneyRates Study Shows Best and Worst States for Healthcare in 2021

Iowa overtakes Massachusetts for top healthcare performance. Stark contrast in healthcare delivery among U.S. states is particularly important amid ongoing

articleQuinstreet, Inc.January 12, 20214/company/quinstreet-inc/news/moneyrates-study-shows-best-and-worst-states-for-healthcare-in-2021-2021-01-12
MoneyRates Study Shows Best and Worst States for Healthcare in 2021

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[{"type":"text","content":"Iowa overtakes Massachusetts for top healthcare performance. Stark contrast in healthcare delivery among U.S. states is particularly important amid ongoing pandemic\n\n\nFOSTER CITY, Calif., Jan. 12, 2021 /PRNewswire/ -- MoneyRates.com updated its award-winning research today on healthcare quality among U.S. states and finds the states that are best positioned to meet coronavirus challenges and other ongoing demands. The latest study confirms that where you live can impact access, cost and effectiveness of healthcare services.\n\n \n \n \n \n \n \n\n \nThe complete report, Vital Signs: Best States for Healthcare 2021, includes an interactive map allowing consumers to easily compare healthcare conditions among up to three states at a time.\nTo analyze healthcare quality, MoneyRates ranked all 50 states plus the District of Columbia on eight factors: \nHealth insurance coverage Reported health status Child immunization coverage Infant mortality Nursing home adequacy Medical office staffing adequacy Hospital affordability Health insurance affordabilityBased on an average ranking across the above criteria, Iowa emerges as this year's best state for healthcare, bumping Massachusetts from its overall position in last year's report. On the opposite end of the spectrum, South Carolina struggles in last place for the second consecutive year.\nHealthcare disparity between states is illustrated in the following examples:\nA Texas resident is six times as likely as one in Massachusetts to lack health insurance West Virginians are almost twice as likely as those in the District of Columbia to describe themselves as being in fair or poor health The infant mortality rate in Mississippi is 2.4 times that in New Hampshire The cost of a daily hospital stay is more than 2.5 times as high in Washington state as in Mississippi\"As COVID cases strain health systems nationally, it becomes increasingly important to understand which states are most likely to deliver highest quality care,\" notes Richard Barrington, senior financial analyst for MoneyRates. \"Healthcare is one factor considered by those determining the best states to retire, and also for people thinking about the best states to raise a family.\"\nIowa achieves top-ten ranking in four of eight categories this year, with first-place position in health insurance coverage and child immunizati...

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