Reports
This page has current reports about Orange County’s community health, please browse our categories below to gain access to all available reports.
This page has current reports about Orange County’s community health, please browse our categories below to gain access to all available reports.
This report discusses the dramatic increase in drug and alcohol related deaths among the youth during the COVID-19 pandemic. The report is separated into deaths among 10-17 year olds and 18-24 year olds, and also addresses opioid-related overdose deaths specifically.
This population overview is a snapshot of available data for the Hispanic/Latinos population in Orange County. This report is the start of democratizing community-level data and includes specific data on health and mortality, social determinants of health, economics and education, and built environment.
This report features a detailed look at the long-term impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic for Orange County, exploring shifts in consumer behavior, the mainstreaming of remote work, and digitization of the workplace and how these changes could potentially influence the county’s market.
This plan is the past Orange County Health Improvement plan of the Orange County Health Improvement Partnership for the 2017-19 period. It is no longer in effect. This plan is a summary of priority areas including: access and system navigation, and social determinants of health.
This report aims to expose key actions and motivations that helped pave the way for modern-day inequities in property and housing, labor, education, and migration and diaspora. It builds upon the OC Equity Profile, wide range of issues and indicators.
Aging is neither simple, nor easy. The 2020 “isolate-at-home” order of COVID introduced millions of older adults to the necessity of online services. This report aims to map the system of senior support available in Orange County by aggregating and analyzing the data available in four key areas.
COVID-19 continues to have an unprecedented impact on the health and well-being of the community. This assessment incorporate components of primary data collection and secondary data analysis that focus on the health and social needs of the service area. The report includes a benchmark comparison data that measures the data findings as compared to Healthy People 2030 objectives.
Significant health needs were identified from issues supported by primary and secondary data sources. The eight significant health needs identified were: Access to health care; Chronic diseases; COVID-19; Housing and homelessness; Mental health; Overweight and obesity; Preventive practice; and substance use.
The APOT time is defined as the time the ambulance wheels stop to the time the patient is transferred from the ambulance gurney to a bed in the emergency department. These times are aggregated and reported at the 90th percentile pursuant to established California State defined standards. Orange County APOT standards are defined pursuant to OCEMS Policy 310.96.
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Diversion is the amount of time (measured in hours) that receiving hospitals are closed to receiving patients transported by 9-1-1 ambulance. These dashboards and reports aggregate daily and montly hours as reported by local hospitals.
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