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ContributorsTrotter, Robert T. (Author) / Harris, Kelly A. (Author) / Navajo County (Ariz.). Public Health Services (Collaborator deprecated, use Contributor))
Created2010-01
Description

The CHSA focuses on 11 health status indicators which include: demographic characteristics, socioeconomic characteristics, health resource availability, quality of life, behavioral risk factors, environmental health, social and mental health, maternal and child health, death, illness and injury, communicable disease, and sentinel events.

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ContributorsBergsma, Lynda (Author) / Delgado, Stephen (Author) / Kizer, Elizabeth (Author) / Navajo County (Ariz.). Public Health Services (Collaborator deprecated, use Contributor))
Created2012
Description

This report serves as an addendum to the Navajo County Community Health Status Assessment dated January of 2010. In most cases, the original data table from the 2010 report is reproduced here with an updated table below. The scope of the project was to update all data where current secondary

This report serves as an addendum to the Navajo County Community Health Status Assessment dated January of 2010. In most cases, the original data table from the 2010 report is reproduced here with an updated table below. The scope of the project was to update all data where current secondary sources of information existed. In a few instances, the research team did obtain primary data by telephone calls.

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ContributorsWaits, Mary Jo (Author) / Fulton, William (Author) / Morrison Institute for Public Policy (Publisher)
Created2003-03
Description

It’s been more than five decades now since Scottsdale incorporated as a city.During that time, the city emerged as one of the most well-known communities in the Western United States—or, as the local logan says,“The West’s Most Western Town.” From the 1950s onward, Scottsdale combined upscale resorts, an outstanding arts

It’s been more than five decades now since Scottsdale incorporated as a city.During that time, the city emerged as one of the most well-known communities in the Western United States—or, as the local logan says,“The West’s Most Western Town.” From the 1950s onward, Scottsdale combined upscale resorts, an outstanding arts and culture scene, and a spectacular natural setting to create a cachet that few other cities anywhere in the nation could match. So powerful was the Scottsdale name that the city focused on competing nationally with other brand name towns, rather than operating within the context of metropolitan Phoenix.