Description
Each dwelling visited by the HNP is classified into one of three periods based on the year it was built: before 1950 (“pre-1950”), built 1950-1978, or built after 1978. These periods relate to the general age of the housing. Older housing can present health and safety hazards to their residents. In addition, these groupings coincide with the presence of lead in paint, a health hazard for young children.
For dwellings visited by the Clinton County HNP, this chart displays the percent of homes built in each period by funding cycle. For example, the first set of bars shows the percent of dwellings that were built before 1950 during each of the 3 funding cycles. We can see that Clinton County has increased the percent of the oldest homes from about 10% in the first funding cycle to almost 30% during the current funding cycle. Looking at the orange bars, we see that during the current funding cycle, Clinton County’s HNP has visited about the same percentage of homes built in each time period.
The counties participating in the Healthy Neighborhoods Program can create this type of chart to view trends in how they are targeting their visits. For example, if a county wants to reach older homes, it may want to refocus its efforts on communities with older housing stock. The "About" tab contains additional details concerning this dataset.
For dwellings visited by the Clinton County HNP, this chart displays the percent of homes built in each period by funding cycle. For example, the first set of bars shows the percent of dwellings that were built before 1950 during each of the 3 funding cycles. We can see that Clinton County has increased the percent of the oldest homes from about 10% in the first funding cycle to almost 30% during the current funding cycle. Looking at the orange bars, we see that during the current funding cycle, Clinton County’s HNP has visited about the same percentage of homes built in each time period.
The counties participating in the Healthy Neighborhoods Program can create this type of chart to view trends in how they are targeting their visits. For example, if a county wants to reach older homes, it may want to refocus its efforts on communities with older housing stock. The "About" tab contains additional details concerning this dataset.
Activity
- Community Rating
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- Your Rating
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- Raters
- 0
- Visits
- 68951
- Downloads
- 3048
- Comments
- 0
- Contributors
- 0
Meta
- Category
- Health
- Permissions
- Public
- Tags
- carbon monoxide, environmental health, fire safety, hazards, healthy homes, homes, housing, indoor air, intervention, mold, lead, pests, program evaluation, smoking, tobacco, community health and chronic disease
- SODA2 Only
- Yes
Attachments
- NYSDOH_HealthyNeighborhoodsProgram_Benefits.pdf
- NYSDOH_HealthyNeighborhoodsProgram_Research.pdf
- NYSDOH_HealthyNeighborhoodsProgram_ScannableForm_UserManual.pdf
- NYSDOH_HealthyNeighborhoodsProgram_Form.pdf
- NYSDOH_HealthyNeighborhoodsProgram_Overview.pdf
- NYSDOH_HealthyNeighborhoodsProgram_DataDictionary.pdf
Licensing and Attribution
- Data Provided By
- New York State Department of Health
- Source Link
- http://www.health.ny.gov/environmental/indoors/healthy_neighborhoods/
Dataset Information
- Agency
- Health, Department of
Dataset Summary
- Time Period
- Beginning January 2007
- Posting Frequency
- Annually
- Dataset Owner
- Center for Environmental Health/Bureau of Community Environmental Health and Food Protection
- Coverage
- Statewide with Limited Number of Counties
- Granularity
- Target areas within selected ZIP codes or census tracts
- Units
- Aggregated Initial Visits; aggregated Revisits
- Organization
- Office of Public Health
- Data Frequency
- N/A See notes
Disclaimers
- Limitations
- The data is collected for the purpose of program evaluation and is subject to a number of important limitations that may impact analysis and interpretation of the data. These limitations are outlined in the overview document. Researchers agree to: 1. Read the NYS Healthy Neighborhoods Program Overview, data dictionaries and other supporting documentation, as appropriate. 2. Use the data for descriptive purposes only. 3. Include a disclaimer that credits any analyses, interpretations, or conclusions reached to the author and not NYSDOH.
Notes
- Notes
- The dataset includes summary data of dwellings visited by county health departments by county and funding cycle as well as for all counties combined by funding cycle.
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