Minnesota

  • Year Settled:1805
  • First Person Name:Tim Walz
  • First Person Title:Governor
  • Period:2019-2023
  • Capital:St. Paul (2019)
  • Largest City:Minneapolis (2019)
  • Land Area in Square Miles:79626,74 (2021)
  • Total Population in Thousands:5707,39 (2021)
  • Population per Square Mile:71,7 (2021)
  • Fertility Rate in Births per 1000 Women:62,7 (2018)
  • Median Age:38,3 (2019)
  • GDP, Millions of Current $:383.777,0 (2019)
  • GDP per capita, Current Prices:60.066,00 (2019)
  • Real GDP at Chained 2009 Prices:305.627 (2017)
  • New Private Housing Units Authorized by Building Permits:1865 (2017)
  • Per capita Personal Income:37.625 (2019)
  • Total Employment, Thousands of Jobs:3.795,76 (2018)
  • Unemployment Rate (SA),%:3,2 (2019)
  • People of All Ages in Poverty, %:9,7 (2019)
  • Official Web-Site of the State

Comparar

Todos los conjuntos de datos: 3 A E F H I M R S T U V W
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  • H
    • mayo 2022
      Fuente: U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
      Subido por: Knoema
      Acceso el: 26 noviembre, 2023
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      The Health, United States series presents an annual overview of national trends in health statistics. The report contains a Chartbook that assesses the nation's health by presenting trends and current information on selected measures of morbidity, mortality, health care utilization and access, health risk factors, prevention, health insurance, and personal health care expenditures. This year's Chartbook includes a Special Feature on the health of adults aged 55–64. The report also contains 123 Trend Tables organized around four major subject areas: health status and determinants, health care utilization, health care resources, and health care expenditures. A companion report—Health, United States: In Brief—featuresinformation extracted from the full report. The complete report, In Brief, and related data products are available on the Health, United States website.
    • junio 2023
      Fuente: U.S. Census Bureau
      Subido por: Knoema
      Acceso el: 26 junio, 2023
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      Health Indicators on US States
    • septiembre 2024
      Fuente: U.S. Census Bureau
      Subido por: Knoema
      Acceso el: 24 septiembre, 2024
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      Health Insurance in the United States
    • diciembre 2018
      Fuente: Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation
      Subido por: Knoema
      Acceso el: 26 diciembre, 2018
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      Global Burden of Disease Study 2016 (GBD 2016) Healthcare Access and Quality Index Based on Amenable Mortality 1990–2016. Global Burden of Disease Study 2016 (GBD 2016) estimates were used in an analysis of personal healthcare access and quality for 195 countries and territories, as well as selected subnational locations, over time. This dataset includes the following global, regional, national, and selected subnational estimates for 1990-2016: age-standardized risk-standardized death rates from 24 non-cancer causes considered amenable to healthcare; age-standardized mortality-to-incidence ratios for 8 cancers considered amenable to healthcare; and the Healthcare Access and Quality (HAQ) Index and individual scores for each of the 32 causes on a scale of 0 to 100. Code used to produce the estimates is also included. Results were published in The Lancet in May 2018 in "Measuring performance on the Healthcare Access and Quality Index for 195 countries and territories and selected subnational locations: a systematic analysis from the Global Burden of Disease Study 2016
    • agosto 2023
      Fuente: Health Care Cost Institute
      Subido por: Knoema
      Acceso el: 15 noviembre, 2023
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      Healthy Marketplace Index (HMI) project is an initiative of HCCI, it tracks drivers of health care spending across 186 cities in the U.S. 
    • junio 2023
      Fuente: Commonwealth Fund
      Subido por: Knoema
      Acceso el: 26 junio, 2023
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      30-day hospital readmissions among Medicare beneficiaries age 65 and older per 1,000 beneficiaries, by income
  • I
    • marzo 2020
      Fuente: Kaiser Health News
      Subido por: Knoema
      Acceso el: 24 marzo, 2020
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      Knoema modified the original dataset to include calculated indicators of "Total county population per ICU bed" and "Number of ICU beds per 100,000 population.”   Notes: This dataset includes the most recent reports, from FY 2018 and 2019. Some hospitals may have closed since then, and some hospitals may have made errors in their reporting. In some cases, beds in small satellite hospitals are reported in the main hospital's filing. Hospitals for veterans run by the Department of Defense are not included in this dataset.  
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    • diciembre 2024
      Fuente: Kaiser Family Foundation
      Subido por: Knoema
      Acceso el: 06 marzo, 2025
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      Health Professional Shortage Area (HPSA) designations are used to identify areas and population groups within the United States that are experiencing a shortage of health professionals. There are three categories of HPSA designation based on the health discipline that is experiencing a shortage: 1) primary medical; 2) dental; and 3) mental health. The primary factor used to determine a HPSA designation is the number of health professionals relative to the population with consideration of high need. Federal regulations stipulate that, in order to be considered as having a shortage of providers, an area must have a population-to-provider ratio of a certain threshold. For mental health, the population to provider ratio must be at least 30,000 to 1 (20,000 to 1 if there are unusually high needs in the community). The number of mental health care HPSA designations includes HPSAs that are proposed for withdrawal and HPSAs that have no data. By statute, designations are not withdrawn until a Federal Register Notice is published, generally once a year on or around July 1.
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    • abril 2024
      Fuente: Health Care Cost Institute
      Subido por: Knoema
      Acceso el: 07 agosto, 2024
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      The 2020 Health Care Cost and Utilization Report presents data on health care spending, utilization, and average prices from 2016 through 2020 for individuals under the age of 65 who receive health insurance coverage through an employer. The report relies on de-identified commercial health insurance claims contributed by CVS Health/Aetna, Humana, and Blue Health Intelligence during this period.
    • agosto 2022
      Fuente: Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services
      Subido por: Knoema
      Acceso el: 19 agosto, 2022
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      Per Capita Health Care and Health Insurance Spendings in United States
  • V
    • septiembre 2024
      Fuente: U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
      Subido por: Knoema
      Acceso el: 01 abril, 2025
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      Vaccination Coverage among Young Children (0 – 35 Months)
    • marzo 2025
      Fuente: U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
      Subido por: Knoema
      Acceso el: 20 marzo, 2025
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      Data cited at:  Ahmad FB, Rossen LM, Sutton P. Provisional drug overdose death counts. National Center for Health Statistics. 2020. Designed by LM Rossen, A Lipphardt, FB Ahmad, JM Keralis, and Y Chong: National Center for Health Statistics. This data contains provisional counts for drug overdose deaths based on a current flow of mortality data in the National Vital Statistics System. Counts for the most recent final annual data are provided for comparison. National provisional counts include deaths occurring within the 50 states and the District of Columbia as of the date specified and may not include all deaths that occurred during a given time period. Provisional counts are often incomplete and causes of death may be pending investigation (see Technical notes) resulting in an underestimate relative to final counts. To address this, methods were developed to adjust provisional counts for reporting delays by generating a set of predicted provisional counts (see Technical notes). Starting in June 2018, this monthly data release will include both reported and predicted provisional counts.
    • noviembre 2023
      Fuente: U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
      Subido por: Knoema
      Acceso el: 20 noviembre, 2023
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      Data cited at: Ahmad FB, Bastian B. Quarterly provisional estimates for selected indicators of mortality, 2018-Quarter 3, 2019. National Center for Health Statistics. National Vital Statistics System, Vital Statistics Rapid Release Program. 2020. Provisional estimates of death rates. Estimates are presented for each of the 15 leading causes of death plus estimates for deaths attributed to drug overdose, falls (for persons aged 65 and over), human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) disease, homicide, and firearms-related deaths.
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    • septiembre 2023
      Fuente: U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
      Subido por: Ritesh Kumar
      Acceso el: 20 noviembre, 2023
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      Note: Effective September 27, 2023, this dataset will no longer be updated. Provisional counts of deaths by the week the deaths occurred, by state of occurrence, and by select underlying causes of death. The dataset also includes weekly provisional counts of death for COVID-19, coded to ICD-10 code U07.1 as an underlying or multiple cause of death.