PLoS ONE (Jan 2018)

Identifying county characteristics associated with resident well-being: A population based study.

  • Brita Roy,
  • Carley Riley,
  • Jeph Herrin,
  • Erica S Spatz,
  • Anita Arora,
  • Kenneth P Kell,
  • John Welsh,
  • Elizabeth Y Rula,
  • Harlan M Krumholz

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0196720
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 5
p. e0196720

Abstract

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Well-being is a positively-framed, holistic assessment of health and quality of life that is associated with longevity and better health outcomes. We aimed to identify county attributes that are independently associated with a comprehensive, multi-dimensional assessment of individual well-being.We performed a cross-sectional study examining associations between 77 pre-specified county attributes and a multi-dimensional assessment of individual US residents' well-being, captured by the Gallup-Sharecare Well-Being Index. Our cohort included 338,846 survey participants, randomly sampled from 3,118 US counties or county equivalents.We identified twelve county-level factors that were independently associated with individual well-being scores. Together, these twelve factors explained 91% of the variance in individual well-being scores, and they represent four conceptually distinct categories: demographic (% black); social and economic (child poverty, education level [<high school, high school diploma/equivalent, college degree], household income, % divorced); clinical care (% eligible women obtaining mammography, preventable hospital stays per 100,000, number of federally qualified health centers); and physical environment (% commuting by bicycle and by public transit).Twelve factors across social and economic, clinical care, and physical environmental county-level factors explained the majority of variation in resident well-being.