| Variable | Description |
|---|---|
| tract, zip_code, county | Geographic identifier (census tract FIPS, ZIP Code, or county FIPS) |
| coi | Overall OCOI v3 score (0–100; higher = more opportunity) |
| d_famstb | Domain score — Family Stability |
| d_crime | Domain score — Crime and Safety |
| d_educ | Domain score — Education |
| d_env | Domain score — Environment |
| d_chdhlth | Domain score — Child Health |
| d_infhlth | Domain score — Infant Health |
| d_house | Domain score — Housing |
| d_access | Domain score — Accessibility of Health-Related Resources |
| zero_pop_tract | Indicator (tracts only) that the census tract population is zero |
Ohio Children’s Opportunity Index Version 3: Quick Start Guide
Introduction
The Ohio Children’s Opportunity Index (OCOI) is an area-focused metric that aggregates neighborhood conditions based on factors tied to healthy growth and well-being of children into a single index score. Its uses could include
- focusing resource distribution
- facilitating research
- informing policy decisions
by offering a comprehensive geographic perspective on growth and health opportunities in Ohio at a Census tract, zip code, or county level.
Content Notes
This data package contains the OCOI version 3 data for multiple geographies (tract, zip/ZCTA, county), a brief report of methods and changes from OCOI version 2, and this quick start guide.
The table below provides simple descriptions of the fields in the OCOI data files. Domain scores represent the degree of opportunity within an area based on variables related to socioeconomic, health, and / or environmental influences that were tied to each domain concept. The “Overall Ohio Children’s Opportunity Index” is a composite measure derived from the domain scores and represents an aggregate index of opportunity for each geographic unit.
The domain scores and the overall OCOI scores are on different scales. The domain scores are means of the standardized individual variables nested within each domain. Each collection of domain scores (e.g., tract-level housing scores) are standardized to have a mean of 0 and standard deviation of 1. The overall OCOI score is a combination of the domain scores and has been scaled to have values that range between 0 and 100. All variables are directed such that higher values refer to higher levels of opportunity. Please see the included report on more details of how the index and its components are constructed.
The zip code data file is intended to represent opportunity by zip code as opposed to (but not excluding) zip code tabulation area (ZCTA) identifier. It is derived from the tract-level opportunity scores. We first assigned a score to each Census block based on the Census tract in which it is situated and then aggregating those scores to the geographic ZCTA level using a weighted mean. The weight was the population size in the block. We then used a zip code-to-ZCTA crosswalk downloaded from the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) to effectively duplicate some ZCTA OCOI and domain values for all zip codes that the crosswalk assigns to each ZCTA. Therefore, joining/merging the OCOI zip code data file to your data will work well regardless of whether your data are identified by zip code OR by ZCTA.
The county data file is intended to represent opportunity by county identifier. Similar to the zip code data file, the county data file was derived from the tract-level opportunity scores. However, because census tracts are perfectly nested within counties, we directly aggregated tract scores within a county, again using a weighted mean, which was weighted on the tract population.
Variable Names and Brief Description
Project Contact: Nathan.Doogan@osumc.edu