Per Capita Health Service Providers, Rural and Small Town Alberta

Per Capita Health Service Providers, Rural and Small Town Alberta This Alberta Official Statistic describes the per capita health service providers in 2011. Per capita health service providers are the number of individuals working in medicine or health occupations per 1,000 people. The population is divided into larger urban centres and rural and small town areas. Within rural and small town Alberta, the population is divided into four categories according to integration with urban economies. The four categories are called Metropolitan Influence Zones (MIZ) and capture urban integration by measuring the percentage of the working population commuting to urban centers. The categories are: Strong MIZ (where 30% to 49% of the workforce commutes to an urban core) Moderate MIZ (where 5% to 29% commute to an urban core) Weak MIZ (where 1% to 4% commute to an urban core) No MIZ (where there are no residents commuting to an urban core) 2024-03-13 Government of Alberta osi.support@gov.ab.ca Arts, Music, LiteratureHealth and SafetyAOSAlberta Official StatisticsHealthcare providers Alberta Official Statistic VisualizationPDF https://open.alberta.ca/dataset/4528262f-abbc-48f7-abfc-b2a234fd540e/resource/181b02ca-d930-4df0-9e70-9da857933767/download/0702201581percapitahealthserviceprovidersonepage.pdf CSVCSV https://open.alberta.ca/dataset/4528262f-abbc-48f7-abfc-b2a234fd540e/resource/8b7f0283-28a7-4512-8986-78e413fb7e60/download/stcpercapitahealthserviceprovruralandsmalltowncsvv1.02014-01-140.csv Original metadata (https://open.alberta.ca/opendata)HTML https://open.alberta.ca/opendata/4528262f-abbc-48f7-abfc-b2a234fd540e

This Alberta Official Statistic describes the per capita health service providers in 2011. Per capita health service providers are the number of individuals working in medicine or health occupations per 1,000 people. The population is divided into larger urban centres and rural and small town areas. Within rural and small town Alberta, the population is divided into four categories according to integration with urban economies. The four categories are called Metropolitan Influence Zones (MIZ) and capture urban integration by measuring the percentage of the working population commuting to urban centers. The categories are: Strong MIZ (where 30% to 49% of the workforce commutes to an urban core) Moderate MIZ (where 5% to 29% commute to an urban core) Weak MIZ (where 1% to 4% commute to an urban core) No MIZ (where there are no residents commuting to an urban core)

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