The Community Health Status Indicators Project was undertaken to produce county-specific reports assessing the status of community health for local jurisdictions throughout the United States. To accomplish this assessment, the Community Health Status Indicators Project team selected peer groupings of counties to monitor and analyze the health of local communities relative to peer communities.
To identify peer counties, the project team used 5 categorical county demographic variables, a specified order for applying criteria, and a predetermined target for peer grouping size to subdivide counties into homogeneous subgroups called peer groupings.
Eighty-eight peer groupings were developed with 14–58 counties in each. The average size of each peer grouping was 35 counties. All peer groupings included counties representing at least 6 states.
Peer groupings are very useful for community health assessment. They convey the range of health status indicator values for similar counties, serve as a basis for expected numbers of reportable diseases, and provide a method for comparing communities with peer and U.S. medians. To maintain their usefulness, peer groupings must be updated periodically.
Use of a comparison group to assess community health is as old as epidemiology itself and is the basis for calculating the expected values and relative risks of public health interventions and for assessing what levels of success those interventions are likely to achieve. The first step in prevention and control of chronic disease is to assess a community's standing with respect to chronic disease outcomes. Such an assessment can identify the community's needs and serve as the basis for gathering support for new or revitalized interventions to address those needs. The Community Health Status Indicators (CHSI) Project was undertaken to produce county-specific reports assessing community health status relative to peer counties across the United States.
The CHSI Project sought to identify the appropriate comparison population for assessing a county's standing with regard to the incidence of chronic diseases. To accomplish this, the CHSI Project needed to assign each county a set of peer counties (
The CHSI Project is ongoing and issued its first set of peer counties in 2000 (CHSI 2000). An updated set of peer groupings was issued in September 2007 (CHSI 2007).
Previous efforts to implement the concept of peer communities have taken 1 of 3 approaches: 1) subjective selection of 2 or 3 counties without regard for actual jurisdictional characteristics, often made out of convenience (
Designated peer groupings allow explicit comparisons of counties and may include rankings and statistical testing of differences observed between the county and its peers. More often, however, comparisons are implicitly made by the reader. In such cases, an alphabetical listing of counties and their health indicators is provided with no attempt to indicate whether the number (e.g., a mortality rate) represents a county's "good" or "poor" health. In a survey of hospital-initiated assessments of local health, Fielding and colleagues noted that they looked for a designation of whether the community was better or worse, health-wise, than the chosen comparison group, but found that that information was rarely available (
The CHSI Project compared each county it assessed to its peers. During the development and evaluation phases of the project, user feedback consistently noted that the feature of peer counties from throughout the United States was a value-added utility of the CHSI Project county report. Thus, peer comparisons became a cornerstone of the CHSI Project reports. This paper will describe the strategy used to provide peer comparisons, address constraints in developing peer groupings in the CHSI Project, and detail the CHSI Project's peer-grouping algorithm. We discuss our experience in determining health status indicators for U.S. counties and make recommendations for future peer-grouping strategies.
In 1998, the CHSI Project assembled an advisory panel of academic public health services researchers and local, state, and federal public health representatives who guided the development of the project's local county reports (
It was determined early on in the project design that county-specific reports would be brief but would represent as broad a perspective on public health as space and data would allow. Ultimately, the report template was 16 pages, including title and back pages. Much background material was published in a companion document (
Three goals guided the development of peer groupings. First, peer groupings needed to be transparent and immediately understandable in order to easily communicate a county's standing among its peers. A second goal for the CHSI Project reports was to explicitly compare counties with their peers. The third goal was to use the wisdom of practitioners and academicians to ground peer-grouping formation.
Peer groupings were constructed with the 3 goals in mind. The first goal in creating peer groupings was to make the groupings a manageable size, 30–40 counties each, so that all members of any peer grouping could be listed in the county report. Because the entire CHSI 2000 Report was only 16 half-pages long, we arbitrarily constrained space for listing peer counties to 1 page. Nevertheless, the CHSI Project provided a relatively large set of peers for each grouping. This approach enabled the listing of counties in the CHSI Project report on 1 page and resulted in peer groupings with more than a few peers.
A second goal for the CHSI Project reports was to explicitly compare counties with their peers. Thus, the reports incorporated calculations such as expected numbers of reportable diseases based on peer experience, the peer grouping range for other indicators, and a symbol as to whether the county's data for a specific indicator was above the median of its peers or at or below the median of its peers. Expected numbers were obtained by calculating a rate for the peer group as a whole and comparing it with each peer grouping member's population. For each indicator and peer grouping, the range of values for 80% of the counties was represented by the 10th and 90th percentile, which excluded the highest 10% and the lowest 10% of values exhibited by counties in the peer grouping. When a county's rate was worse than the peer grouping's median value, a magnifying glass was printed alongside the county rates. When a county's rate was better than or equal to the peer grouping's median value, an apple was printed.
A third goal in generating peer groupings was use of wisdom and conventions from public health practice. From the experience and advice of our advisors, 5 criteria for grouping counties as peers were obtained and then applied to the creation of peer groupings. Thus, because NACCHO, in its periodic survey of local health departments, used particular population size categories to describe a community served by a local health department (
The CHSI Project's steering committee provided guidance on the order in which these variables would be applied, based on their knowledge of how health services are organized (i.e., by frontier status, urban and rural population density factors) (
The second and third peer groupings that CHSI 2000 created are distinguished from each other by poverty (the median proportion of all county populations living in poverty was ≤10.5%). Both peer groupings were made up of nonfrontier counties having a population size of 500,000–999,999, and included either low (≤10.5%) or high poverty levels (>10.5%). For most counties, all criteria were applied, and thus peer groupings were defined by frontier status, population size, poverty level, age distribution, and population density (
By design, the CHSI Project provided the most recent data to counties while assuring stable measures (i.e., sufficient sample size). Data were aggregated by peer grouping across 10, 5, or 3 years because peer groupings were made up of counties having similar population size. In summary, counties were subdivided into relatively homogeneous county subgroups using up to 5 categorical variables, a specified order for the criteria, and a predetermined target for peer grouping size.
From the 3082 counties in the United States, 88 peer groupings were designated, with sizes ranging from 14–58 counties and an average size of 35 (
Every peer grouping contained counties from multiple states (
Aggregation of data during a 3-, 5-, or 10-year period depended on the size of counties. Most counties (59%) were provided indicators aggregated during a 5-year period (
The CHSI Project report provided population size and density, percentage of residents living in poverty, race/ethnicity, and age distributions. The report section presented the minimum and maximum values among the peers (
County health status indicator values were assessed as being above, equal to, or below the median value within the county's peer grouping. County indicators showing an outcome better than or equal to the median were noted with an apple symbol. Values for counties below the median were noted with a magnifying glass (
The range of values in a peer grouping was indicated by the 10th and 90th percentiles of county outcomes (
Peer counties' disease counts and populations were totaled and an overall rate generated for each peer group by dividing total cases by total population for the period. Expected number of cases for each disease (rounded to the nearest whole number) was obtained by multiplying the peer grouping rate by the county population (
Indicators for natality and mortality were aggregated during varying numbers of years to balance the issues of using the most recent data available and providing an estimate that was relatively stable. The span of years presented is the same for all counties in any 1 peer grouping. Three-, 5-, and 10-year annual averages were calculated for populations ≥100,000, 25,000–99,999, and <25,000.
Indicators other than natality and mortality were presented throughout all counties only for a single year or 1 multiple-year period depending on the source of data involved. For example, toxic release substances were reported for 1 year while quality of life and life expectancy were reported for a single 5-year period. Suppression rules were applied to data to assure stability among the indicators presented (
CHSI 2000 incorporated peer groupings into the community health assessment assembled for each U.S. county, 3082 in all. Creation of peer groupings facilitated decisions about the number of data years to aggregate and allowed several states to be represented among a county's peers. Peer findings were integrated into the reports by indicating the number of cases of disease expected in a peer group, the range of the number of cases within the peer group, and whether a county was better than the median of its peers or of the United States.
The CHSI Project's approach to designating peers created 88 strata, based on the following hierarchically applied factors: frontier status, population size, poverty, age distribution, and population density. The approach yielded a peer grouping average size of 35 counties but did not avoid the creation of very small and very large peer groupings.
Diversity within peer groupings is greatest among those groupings of moderate size, no doubt because of the diversity that is present in states themselves. Few states have sparsely populated counties.
The peer grouping approach is readily transparent, easy to put into operation, and is consonant with local health departments, neighborhood planners, advocates, and citizenry who have an interest in local health (
Practice-based alternative peer groupings should be examined with feedback from users of the CHSI Project reports. It may be that additional data necessary for determining new peer groupings are not yet available (e.g., county public health expenditures). In CHSI 2000, provision of county information immediately generated requests for neighborhood-level data and peers, data that are not available routinely yet. Sub-county areas such as neighborhoods may display the heterogeneity that is present in the county-level measures because counties may be quite large (
Peer groupings have much utility for community health assessment, including conveying the range of health status indicator values for similar counties, a basis for expected numbers of reportable diseases, and a method for a median comparison. To maintain their utility, peer groupings must be updated periodically. Peer grouping criteria, such as population size and density and age composition, are components influencing county health outcomes (
The authors thank the CHSI Project Advisory Committee, which first met in 1998, for its advice throughout the development of the county reports; the Health Resources and Services Administration staff for their administrative guidance and financial support; and others dedicated to the concept and pursuit of community health assessment. Norma Kanarek has an Interagency Personnel Agreement with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Members of One Community Health Status Indicator (CHSI) Project Peer Grouping Based on Nonfrontier
| Maricopa, Arizona | Cook, Illinois | Queens, New York |
Nonfrontier counties have ≥7 people per square mile..
Members of One Community Health Status Indicator (CHSI) Project Peer Grouping Based on Frontier Status
| La Paz, Arizona | Quay, New Mexico | Briscoe, Texas |
Frontier counties have a population density of <7 people per square mile.
Distribution of Peer Groupings
| Frontier Counties | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Population Size | Poverty Prevalence | |||
| ≤10.4 % | 10.5%–14.1% | 14.2%–19.0% | ≥19.1% | |
| <25,000: Groupings | 2 (69) | 3 (130) | 3 (101 | 3 (91) |
| ≥25,000: Groupings (no. of counties) | 1 (14) | |||
| Nonfrontier Counties | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Population Size | Poverty Prevalence | |||
| ≤10.4 % | 10.5–14.1% | 14.2–19.0% | ≥19.1% | |
| <25,000: Groupings (no. of counties) | 2 (56) | 2 (108) | 3 (142) | 1(34) |
| 25,000–49,999: Groupings (no. of counties) | 9 (312) | 7 (283) | 10 (327) | 16 (527) |
| 50,000–99,999: Groupings (no. of counties) | 4 (113) | 3 (111) | 3 (98) | 1 (55) |
| 100,000–249,999: Groupings (no. of counties) | 3 (119) | 3 (92) | 1 (34) | 1 (51) |
| 250,000–499,999: Groupings (no. of counties) | 2 (61) | 1 (26) | 1 (24) | |
| 500,000–999,999: Groupings (no. of counties) | 1 (31) | 1 (39) | ||
| ≥1,000,000: Groupings (no. of counties) | 1 (34) | |||
Frontier counties have a population density of <7 people per square mile; nonfrontier counties have ≥7 people per square mile.
There are a total of 88 peer groupings and 3082 counties. (Alaska is one county aggregate.)
Distribution of States in Peer Groupings, by Population and County, Community Health Status Indicators Project 2000
| Population | No. of Peer Groupings | Modal No. of States in Peer Grouping | Range |
|---|---|---|---|
| <25,000 | 19 | 11 | 7–22 |
| 25,000–49,999 | 43 | 11 | 6–25 |
| 50,000–99,999 | 9 | 18–19 | 9–22 |
| 100,000–249,999 | 7 | 24 | 12–24 |
| ≥250,000 | 10 | 18 | 14–23 |
| Total | 88 | 11 | 6–25 |
Distribution of Years of Data Represented in Project Peer Groupings, by Population, Community Health Status Indicators Project, 2000
| Population | No. of Counties | No. of Data Years Presented |
|---|---|---|
| <25,000 | 731 (24%) | 10 |
| 25,000–49,999 | 1463 (47%) | 5 |
| 50,000–99,999 | 377 (12%) | 5 |
| 100,000–249,999 | 296 (10%) | 3 |
| ≥250,000 | 215 (7%) | 3 |
| Total | 3082 (100%) | 3–10 |
The opinions expressed by authors contributing to this journal do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the US Department of Health and Human Services, the Public Health Service, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, or the authors’ affiliated institutions. Use of trade names is for identification only and does not imply endorsement by any of the groups named above. URLs for nonfederal organizations are provided solely as a service to our users. URLs do not constitute an endorsement of any organization by CDC or the federal government, and none should be inferred. CDC is not responsible for the content of Web pages found at these URLs.