Happiest and Most Miserable US States

thoughtone

Rising Star
Registered
source: 24/7 Wall Street

America’s Happiest States

1. Hawaii
> Well-being index score: 71.1
> Life expectancy: 81.5 years (the highest)
> Obesity: 25.7% (20th lowest)
> Median household income: $61,821 (8th highest)
> Adult population with high school diploma or higher: 90.6% (10th highest)

In Gallup’s 2012 well-being index, Hawaii performed better than any other state. It ranked first or second in five of the six categories that make up the index, and 14th in basic access to care. Hawaii’s residents reported being generally happier with their current lives than those of any other state. They were also a more optimistic group. More than two-thirds of Hawaiians reported not feeling stressed, compared to just 52.8% of West Virginians who could say that. A larger proportion of Hawaiians exercise than any state but Alaska, and residents also eat healthily and do not smoke. At the latest count, life expectancy at birth in the state was 81.5 years, by far the best in the country.


2.Colorado
> Well-being index score: 69.7
> Life expectancy: 79.9 years (9th highest)
> Obesity: 18.7% (the lowest)
> Median household income: $55,387 (15th highest)
> Adult population with high school diploma or higher: 90.2% (15th highest)

Coloradans were among the most likely Americans to practice healthy behaviors, such as exercising regularly and eating fruits and vegetables. They were also among the least likely to smoke and among the most likely to report easy access to a safe place to exercise. Their healthy behavior appears to be paying off. Colorado was rated the best state for physical health in the United States, having some of the nation’s lowest rates of high blood pressure, high cholesterol, diabetes and obesity. Colorado residents were also among the nation’s healthiest emotionally, and they had high evaluations of their own lives.

3. Minnesota
> Well-being index score: 68.9
> Life expectancy: 80.9 years (2nd highest)
> Obesity: 24.7% (13th lowest)
> Median household income: $56,954 (11th highest)
> Adult population with high school diploma or higher: 92.0% (2nd highest)

Gallup found that Minnesota had better emotional health than all but two states. Some 86% of Minnesotans reported they did not feel an excessive amount of sadness during the previous day, a higher percentage than all but one state. In addition, Minnesotans ranked third in the physical health category. Nearly 83% of survey respondents said they did not have health problems that prevented them from doing activities typical of their age group — a higher-percentage than any other state. According to the most recent data, Minnesotans had the second-highest life expectancy of any state. Also, more than 78% of respondents said poor health did not get in the way of their usual daily activities, a higher percentage than all but one state.

4. Utah
> Well-being index score: 68.8
> Life expectancy: 80.1 years (8th highest)
> Obesity: 23.9% (6th lowest)
> Median household income: $55,869 (14th highest)
> Adult population with high school diploma or higher: 90.3% (14th highest)

Utah residents had higher evaluations of their present lives and higher expectations for the future than residents of nearly every other state. More than 55% of respondents were thriving, while less than 3% were considered to be suffering based on their assessments of their present and future quality of life. In addition to strong evaluations of their own lives, Utah residents had better emotional health and a higher quality of their work environment than residents of most other states. Nearly 70% of respondents told Gallup they had recently learned something new or interesting, a higher percentage than any other state.

5. Vermont
> Well-being index score: 68.6
> Life expectancy: 79.7 years (12th highest)
> Obesity: 25.7% (20th lowest)
> Median household income: $52,776 (19th highest)
> Adult population with high school diploma or higher: 91.8% (4th highest)

Vermont residents display healthier behaviors than any other state in the United States. For example, nearly 72% of Vermont residents told Gallup that they ate healthily all day during the previous day, a higher percentage than any other state except Rhode Island. In fact, nearly two-thirds of respondents said they had at least at least five or more servings of fruits and vegetables in four of the past seven days, a higher proportion than any other state. Nearly 60% of residents said they exercised for at least 30 minutes in three of the past seven days, a higher percentage than all but two other states. The state had among the lowest poverty rates in the country, which may help explain why Vermont residents reported having good access to most basic needs. The state had the second-smallest proportion of residents say they did not have enough money to feed their families.

6. Montana
> Well-being index score: 68.5
> Life expectancy: 78.4 years (24th lowest)
> Obesity: 22.0% (3rd lowest)
> Median household income: $44,222 (13th lowest)
> Adult population with high school diploma or higher: 92.3% (the highest)

Montana appears to have a healthy, well-educated workforce. The state has low unemployment and the highest proportion of adults with a high school degree in the country. State residents were among the most likely to report being in a good work environment. Over 92% of individuals surveyed said they were satisfied with their jobs or the work they did, more than in any other state. Additionally, over 60% stated they felt treated like a partner by their supervisor, higher than all but one other state. Residents also practiced healthy behavior and were more likely than residents of nearly all other states to exercise 30 minutes a day for three days each week. Montanans were among the most likely Americans to eat five servings of fruit and vegetables at least four times a week — even though residents were also among the most likely to claim that finding affordable fruits and vegetables was difficult.

7. Nebraska
> Well-being index score: 68.5
> Life expectancy: 79.2 years (21st highest)
> Obesity: 27.9% (18th highest)
> Median household income: $50,296 (22nd highest)
> Adult population with high school diploma or higher: 91.0% (7th highest)

When it comes to making healthy choices, Nebraska is actually among the worst states in the country. In only one other state did a smaller percentage of those surveyed report eating a healthy amount of fruits and vegetables. The state also performed poorly in the exercise category, with nearly 49% of residents not exercising a healthy amount each week. Despite this, Nebraska residents were in the top 10 for physical health. While the state predictably had issues with certain conditions such as diabetes and obesity, state residents were rarely kept out of work due to physical ailments, and they reported feeling well rested. This might be explained by the low workplace stress levels residents experienced. A full 92% of residents reported being satisfied with their job, and 72.7% were worry-free the previous day, both among the best rates in the country.

8. New Hampshire
> Well-being index score: 68.4
> Life expectancy: 79.7 years (12th highest)
> Obesity: 25.1% (17th lowest)
> Median household income: $62,647 (6th highest)
> Adult population with high school diploma or higher: 91.4% (6th highest)

New Hampshire scored higher than nearly all states in terms of basic access to necessities. Almost 88% of survey respondents in the state said they had a personal doctor, higher than all but three states and well above the 78.3% of people across the country who answered yes to that question. Furthermore, 73.1% of residents said they had visited a dentist within the past 12 months, a higher percentage than all states except for Connecticut and Massachusetts. The low poverty rate of just 8.8% may explain why more of these residents have access to quality health care. The state also ranked seventh highest in terms of healthy behaviors. For instance, nearly 62% of respondents reported they had five or more servings of fruits and vegetables in four of the past seven days, the third highest of all states.

9. Iowa
> Well-being index score: 68.1
> Life expectancy: 79.68 (15th highest)
> Obesity: 29.0% (10th highest)
> Median household income: $49,427 (24th highest)
> Adult population with high school diploma or higher: 90.6% (10th highest)

Iowa ranked behind only Massachusetts and Minnesota in the basic access to necessities category. Almost all residents felt they had access to clean water, while more than 83% felt safe walking alone at night — both among the best in that category. Further, more than 85% of Iowans stated they could afford food at all times over the preceding 12 months — well above the 81.6% for the U.S. overall. Nearly 94% felt they could afford shelter at all times as well, a figure that trails only New Hampshire and South Dakota. Iowans are also among the happiest with their work environments, generally feeling that they are satisfied by their jobs, treated well by their bosses, and using their strengths. However, residents were also more likely to smoke and less likely to eat healthily than the average American.

10. Massachusetts
> Well-being index score: 68.1
> Life expectancy: 80.1 (6th highest)
> Obesity: 21.5% (2nd lowest)
> Median household income: $62,859 (5th highest)
> Adult population with high school diploma or higher: 89.2% (19th highest)

Massachusetts residents feel things are moving in the right direction for them, expressing a high degree of optimism. Massachusetts residents also had better access to resources ensuring their well-being. The state had the highest health insurance coverage rate in the country, together with the fifth-highest median income in 2011, less than 15% of residents reported being unable to pay for health care. However, the state did not do so well in terms of emotional health, scoring seventh worst in the country. Nearly 35% of respondents reported feeling worry in a given day, a higher percentage than all but four states.
 
Last edited:
source: 24/7 Wall Street

America’s Most Miserable States

41. Oklahoma
> Well-being index score: 65.2
> Life expectancy: 75.6 years (5th lowest)
> Obesity: 29.2% (9th highest)
> Median household income: $43,225 (10th lowest)
> Adult population with high school diploma or higher: 86.3% (19th lowest)

Oklahoma scored among the bottom in most of the well-being categories. The state was sixth from the bottom in terms of healthy behavior. Just 73.1% of respondents refrained from smoking, while just 62.2% said they ate healthily the previous day, both among the lowest percentages for all states. Perhaps due to unhealthy behaviors, Oklahoma also had the seventh-worst physical health in the country, and life expectancy at birth as of 2007 was just 75.6%, the fifth-lowest of all states. The only well-being category in which Oklahoma did not score in the bottom quartile was work environment, where the state scored higher than all but seven states. More than 82% of respondents indicated that their supervisor always cultivated an open and trusting work environment, the sixth-highest percentage of all states.

42. Indiana
> Well-being index score: 65.1
> Life expectancy: 77.7 years (16th lowest)
> Obesity: 28.8% (13th highest)
> Median household income: $46,438 (20th lowest)
> Adult population with high school diploma or higher: 87.3% (22nd lowest)

Indiana ranked second from the bottom in terms of healthy behaviors, with only Kentucky performing worse. A mere 48.7% of state residents indicated that they exercised for a minimum of 30 minutes in three of the last seven days, the lowest percentage of all states and significantly lower than the 62.2% in top-ranked Alaska. Furthermore, just 54.1% of residents indicated that they had five or more servings of fruits and vegetables in four of the previous seven days, lower than all states except for North Dakota and Nebraska. Perhaps because of these behaviors, Indiana ranked 10th from the bottom for physical health.

43. Louisiana
> Well-being index score: 64.7
> Life expectancy: 75.4 years (4th lowest)
> Obesity: 30.9% (4th highest)
> Median household income: $41,734 (7th lowest)
> Adult population with high school diploma or higher: 82.5% (4th lowest)

Louisiana scored near the bottom in several different well-being categories. It ranked fifth lowest in terms of healthy behaviors. For instance, just 54.4% of respondents indicated that they had five or more fruit and vegetable servings in four of the past seven days, the sixth-lowest percentage of all states. The state also ranked third from the bottom for basic access to necessities. Just over three-fourths of people indicated that they had health insurance coverage, lower than all states except for Texas. It doesn’t help that the state’s median income of $41,734 was one of the lowest in 2011, and nearly $9,000 lower than the national median.

44. Ohio
> Well-being index score: 64.6
> Life expectancy: 77.5 years (13th lowest)
> Obesity: 29.5% (8th highest)
> Median household income: $45,749 (16th lowest)
> Adult population with high school diploma or higher: 88.3% (25th highest)

Ohio ranked seventh worst in the Gallup report when it came to its residents’ healthy behaviors. Nearly 28% of the population smoked, the third-highest percentage of all states. In addition, Ohio was one of just four states where less than half the respondents indicated that they exercised a minimum of 30 minutes a day in three of the previous seven days. Perhaps due to unhealthy behaviors, Ohio ranked eighth from the bottom in terms of physical health. Almost 30% of the population was considered obese based on their body mass index, the eighth-largest percentage of all states. Moreover, only 68.3% of residents indicated they felt well-rested during the prior day, the eighth-lowest percentage of all states.

45. Alabama
> Well-being index score: 64.2
> Life expectancy: 75.2 years (3rd lowest)
> Obesity: 30.4% (5th highest)
> Median household income: $41,415 (5th lowest)
> Adult population with high school diploma or higher: 82.7% (5th lowest)

Alabama ranked third from the bottom in the physical health category. A hefty 36.4% of respondents indicated they had been told by a doctor or a nurse that they had high blood pressure, while 13.6% of residents were told they had diabetes. Both figures were the third highest among all states. These could be outcomes of poor health behaviors by Alabamians. As much as 26% of Alabama residents noted they smoked, the eighth-highest percentage of all states. Meanwhile, just 50.6% of residents indicated they exercised for a minimum of 30 minutes in at least three of the past seven days, the seventh-lowest of all states. Life expectancy at birth as of 2007 was just over 75 years old, lower than all but two states. The state also ranked 10th from the bottom in terms of emotional health.

46. Arkansas
> Well-being index score: 64.1
> Life expectancy: 76.1 years (6th lowest)
> Obesity: 31.4% (3rd highest)
> Median household income: $38,758 (3rd lowest)
> Adult population with high school diploma or higher: 83.8% (8th lowest)

Arkansas ranked in the bottom 10 in all but one of the well-being categories. The state ranked fourth from the bottom in terms of physical health. A higher percentage of people were told they had cancer compared to any other state. More than 31% of respondents were clinically obese, a higher percentage than all but two states. Arkansas also ranked fourth from the bottom in healthy behaviors. Over 27% of the population indicated that they smoked, the fourth-highest of all states. The average life expectancy in the state was just over 76 years old, the sixth-lowest of all states. Good health could be impeded by the state’s low income. The state’s median household income of $38,758 in 2011 was the third lowest of all states.

47. Tennessee
> Well-being index score: 64.0
> Life expectancy: 76.2 years (8th lowest)
> Obesity: 29.6% (7th highest)
> Median household income: $41,693 (6th lowest)
> Adult population with high school diploma or higher: 84.2% (12th lowest)


to the FBI, Tennessee had the nation’s highest violent crime rate in 2011, at over 608.2 violent crimes per 100,000 residents. This likely affected the state’s rank in Gallup’s access to basic necessities category, which included a question about being able to walk alone at night safely. The state ranked 11th worst in the U.S. in that question. In addition, Tennesseans reported some of the most critical conditions when it came to their own working environments. They were also among the Americans most likely to report they had poor health behaviors, such as not eating well. Just under 62% of Tennesseans indicated they ate healthily all day the day prior to being surveyed–worse than every state but Kentucky. Such unhealthy behavior potentially contributed to the state’s low scores for both emotional and physical health. Residents were among the nation’s most likely to reveal they felt sad or depressed, and also among the most likely to have high blood pressure or cholesterol.

48. Mississippi
> Well-being index score: 63.6
> Life expectancy: 74.8 years (the lowest)
> Obesity: 32.2% (2nd highest)
> Median household income: $36,919 (the lowest)
> Adult population with high school diploma or higher: 81.1% (3rd lowest)

Mississippi ranked lower than any other state in Gallup’s basic access to necessities category. For instance, nearly 25% of state residents indicated they did not have enough money to buy food for themselves or their family at some point in the last 12 months, the highest percentage of all states. Such problems are likely due to the state’s high-poverty rate and overall low incomes. The state’s median household income of $36,919 was the lowest of all 50 states, and the poverty rate of 22.6% was the highest. The lack of basic access to necessities may partly help explain why Mississippi ranked sixth from the bottom in terms of physical health. More than 38% of residents indicated they were told by a doctor or nurse that they had high blood pressure, a higher percentage than any state except for West Virginia. In addition, 15.4% of residents were told they had diabetes, more than any other state.

49. Kentucky
> Well-being index score: 62.7
> Life expectancy: 76.2 years (7th lowest)
> Obesity: 29.7% (6th highest)
> Median household income: $41,141 (4th lowest)
> Adult population with high school diploma or higher: 83.1% (6th lowest)

The state has one of the lowest proportions of adults with a high school degree, as well as the fourth-lowest median income in the country. Kentucky also ranked dead-last in terms of healthy behaviors. A mere 60.7% of respondents said they ate healthily the day before, by far the lowest of any state. Not surprisingly, Kentucky also ranked second from the bottom in terms of physical health. As many as 29% of people indicated they had health problems that prevented them from doing age-appropriate activities, a higher percentage than any state other than West Virginia. Kentucky also ranked second from the bottom in the life evaluation and emotional health categories.

50. West Virginia
> Well-being index score: 61.3
> Life expectancy: 75.2 years (2nd lowest)
> Obesity: 33.5% (the highest)
> Median household income: $38,482 (2nd lowest)
> Adult population with high school diploma or higher: 84.2% (12th lowest)

West Virginia residents’ well-being was the worst of all states. It scored dead last in three of the six categories: life evaluation, emotional health and physical health. The answers of West Virginians to questions in the physical health category were particularly alarming. It was the only state where more than 30% of residents were told by a physician or nurse that they had high cholesterol. In addition, nearly 40% of respondents were told they have high blood pressure, also the highest of all states. Unhealthy behaviors could be causing these problems. For instance, just 62.2% of West Virginians indicated they ate healthily the previous day, the fifth-lowest percentage of all states. Moreover, 31.4% of respondents indicated that they smoked, the highest percentage of all states. The state had the second-lowest median income in the U.S., and a very high proportion of those surveyed in the state reported not being able to afford food or medicine. West Virginians had the second-worst life at birth in the country.
 
<IFRAME SRC="http://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2013/04/look-how-quickly-the-us-got-fat-1985-2010-animated-map/274878/" WIDTH=760 HEIGHT=1500>
<A HREF="http://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2013/04/look-how-quickly-the-us-got-fat-1985-2010-animated-map/274878/">link</A>

</IFRAME>
 
Back
Top