The National Environmental Public Health Tracking Network (Tracking Network) brings together health data and environmental data from national, state, and city sources and provides supporting information to make the data easier to understand. The Tracking Network has data and information on environments and hazards, health effects, and population health.
Provides easy access to national and state level CDC data on a range of key indicators of health and well-being for older adults, including caregiving, subjective cognitive decline, screenings and vaccinations, and mental health. These indicators provide a snapshot of currently available surveillance information and can be useful for prioritization and evaluation of public health interventions.
Surveillance data on HIV infection, viral hepatitis, sexually transmitted diseases (STDs), and tuberculosis (TB), which are available to everyone through an interactive mapping tool.
The nation’s premier system of health-related telephone surveys that collect state data about U.S. residents regarding their health-related risk behaviors, chronic health conditions, and use of preventive services.
National trends data and key measures of progress in cancer prevention and risk factors including tobacco, physical activity, diet, sun, environment, genetic testing, sleep, and weight.
Provides many public health data sets to researchers and the public, including access to preliminary mortality estimates from the National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS). CDC WONDER can be valuable in public health research, decision making, priority setting, program evaluation, and resource allocation. Access statistical research data published by CDC, as well as reference materials, reports and guidelines on health-related topics. Search public-use data sets about deaths, cancer incidence, HIV and AIDS, tuberculosis, vaccinations, births, census data and more.
A repository of data from environmental health academic, industrial, and government laboratories to support study design and data integration for novel meta analysis.
Evidence-based resources and tools to help prevent HIV/AIDS and its complications, including mobile apps, eLearning modules, and recommended interventions.
A monthly peer-reviewed journal that publishes research and news articles on the relationships between the environment and human health, including basic research, epidemiologic studies, longitudinal human studies, and more.
The Environmental Justice Index (EJI) uses data from the U.S. Census Bureau, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, the U.S. Mine Safety and Health Administration, and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to rank the cumulative impacts of environmental injustice on health for every census tract. The EJI delivers a single environmental justice score for each community so that public health officials can identify and map areas at risk for the health impacts of environmental burden.
Comprehensive information on seasonal influenza from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), including information about flu vaccines, prevention strategies, and flu activity and surveillance.
Interactive tool for finding information about select rare diseases including, diagnosis, inheritance, statistics, related research efforts and more.
An advanced fellowship program for physicians who have completed specialty training in hematology and/or oncology and want to gain specialized training in clinical and translational research in HIV malignancies.
Visualize data and locate information critical to understanding minority health, health disparities, and their determinants. Data are collected from public health surveillance systems by using either their published reports or public use files.
Tools and resources on healthcare-associated infections, including fact sheets, funding information, and reports.
Learn about proven, science-based methods to reduce people’s exposure to harmful pollutants in air, water, soil, food, and materials in homes and workplaces. Use these resources to develop programs and policies that are informed by evidence on what's effective, replicable, scalable, and sustainable.
Learn about proven, science-based methods to prevent and treat infectious diseases. Use these resources to develop programs and policies that are informed by evidence on what's effective, replicable, scalable, and sustainable.
Learn about proven, science-based methods to prevent infectious diseases by increasing vaccination rates. Use these resources to develop programs and policies that are informed by evidence on what's effective, replicable, scalable, and sustainable.
A collection of CDC HIV data releases and resources.
The federal government's policies, programs, and resources on HIV/AIDS, including digital tools, health education, strategic planning, and funding.