Governance of Ohio There are 88 counties There are 942 cities and villages There are 1,308 townships There are 667 public school districts There are 631 special districts A board of commissioners, elected for four year terms, whose authority is limited by state law are the officiating officials here. There is an Auditor There is an Financial Officer There is an Clerk of Courts There is an Coroner There is a Engineer There is an Prosecuting attorney There is a Recorder There is a Sheriff There is a Treasurer When the population reaches 5,000, a village automatically becomes a city. Once it becomes a city, law must established with executive and legislative bodies. The city government officials are as follows: A Mayor A City Manager A Commissioners
State’s Major elected Officials A Governor There are Senators There are House of Representatives A Mayor
Reasons: Lack of Management Funding Problems Poor Technology/Old School The Effect Medical technology is not the best one Common medical issues becomes life threatening Medical costs becomes too expensive
Ohio’s Response to the Issue of Health Care in Rural Areas
Local health departments in Ohio There are 58 urban health departments There are 71 rural health departments There are 20 city charters There are 61 combined health districts There are 24 counties with more than one health department
There is an estimated population of 11,536,504 people There are 2,237,079 living in rural Ohio There 173 hospitals in Ohio And 59 of which are located in rural areas There are 34 hospitals identified by the Flex Monitoring Team as Critical Access Hospitals There are 19 Rural Health Clinics in Ohio There are 36 Federally Qualified Health Centers provide services at 137 sites in the state
Create a government mandated technology programs Provide a government training program for medical assistants
To Expand electronic usage implementation and expansion of computer use should be mandatory Get assistance from bigger cities Get help from other networks and increase network if necessary Increase tax if needed Benefits transmission of information can be faster No more misdiagnosis Can make employees more productive
City-Data. (2011). Ohio-Local Government. Retrieved from government.html Healthcare Technology News. (2011, March 13). The Rural Health Problem of Health Information Technology: Introduction. Retrieved September 3, 2011, from HealthCare Technology News: management-technology Ohio.Gov. (2011). Governor Kasich. Retrieved from sich.aspx Ohio Department of Health. (2011). Center for Public Health Statistics and Informatics (CPHSI). Retrieved from
Ohio Department of Health. (2011). Local Health Districts. Retrieved from ain.aspx Ohio Department of Health. (2011). State Office of Rural Health (SORH). Retrieved from programs/rural_health/sorh.aspx Rural Assistance Center. (2011). States. Retrieved from THE COALITION OF RURAL AND APPALACHIAN SCHOOLS. (2011). The Coalitions Mission and Goals. Retrieved from The Rural Health Problems of Information Technology (2011), Retrieved from health-problem-of-health-information-technology/