Dayton Daily News

America’s tallest, shortest states

- By Christophe­r Ingraham

The tallest adult men in America live in Iowa and Alabama, while the tallest women live in South Dakota.

Hawaii, meanwhile, can lay claim to the shortest members of either sex.

Those figures come from the latest release of data from the CDC’s Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillan­ce System (BRFSS), a massive annual survey of health and wellness in the United States. In 2017 the CDC polled over 450,000 people for the survey, enough to provide accurate estimates of health-related data in all 50 states. The typical public opinion poll, by contrast, surveys about 1,000 people nationwide.

The BRFSS is used to track state-level trends in weight and obesity, healthy eating, and physical activity. But the BRFSS also asks its respondent­s, all of whom are age 18 and older, about their height.

At the state level it runs from about 5’9” in Hawaii to about 5’11” in Alabama and Iowa. Generally speaking, men in the Northern Plains states and a swath of Appalachia report the tallest heights, while men in the Northeast and Southwest tend to be shorter.

What’s driving those difference­s? Race is one big factor. Medical examinatio­n data maintained by the CDC shows that white (average height of 5’10”; rounded to the nearest inch) and black (5’9”) men tend to be significan­tly taller than Asian (5’7”) or Hispanic (5’7”) men. Hawaii, California and New York have high Hispanic and Asian population­s. In Hawaii, fewer than one-third of the population identifies as black or white. In Alabama, by contrast, 96 percent of the population is black or white.

Those racial difference­s underscore a key point about height: much of the difference­s in height within a population are a function of genetics. But not all of them. A simple way to control for the effects of race is to examine the data for one racial subset of men. We’ll use white men in this case, for the sole reason that that gives us the biggest sample size nationwide, and hence the most reliable data.

Even when you isolate white men, the results follow the same general contours: the tallest men live in the plains and Alabama, while the shortest are found in the northeast and southwest.

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