About New Hampshire Tracking Program

What to know

The New Hampshire (NH) Tracking Program will help policymakers, health professionals, scientists, researchers and others to:

  • Advance research on possible linkages between environmental hazards and disease;
  • Monitor information about environmental hazards and disease trends;
  • Track advances in health status and environmental improvements; and
  • Use data to develop, implement, and evaluate regulatory and public health actions to prevent or control environment-related diseases.

Quick Stats

New Hampshire has one of the highest rates of Lyme disease in the country. Anaplasmosis, babesiosis, and Powassan virus are other tickborne diseases that have been documented in NH.

New Hampshire is known as the Granite State due to its granite bedrock. But that also means there is a high risk of having arsenic in groundwater. NH has the highest rate of bladder cancer cases in the nation—37% higher than the national rate. 1One of the leading causes of bladder cancer in the state is exposure to arsenic in private drinking water wells.

About 4 out of 10 (44%) New Hampshire households get their drinking water from private wells. Unhealthy levels of contaminants, like arsenic, radon, and uranium, are common in many private wells and have been linked to cancer. Contamination can come from natural sources, like bedrock, or from man-made sources, like lawn care products, agricultural run-off, or plumbing fixtures. Private wells are not regulated and do not require testing by state law.

Accomplishments

Assessing Exposure to Contaminated Drinking Water

Working with other state agencies, the NH Tracking Program responded to communities affected by contaminated private drinking water wells and public drinking water systems. The NH Tracking Program provided and interpreted blood tests for contaminants like perfluorochemicals (PFC) and per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS). Also, tracking program staff analyzed results to determine the extent of exposure. NH Tracking displays aggregate (not individual) blood test results from each testing location.

Informing Revision of Heat Advisory Policy in New England

The NH Tracking Program, along with key partners from Maine and Rhode Island, evaluated the effects of heat on health across the Northeast region of the United States. The data showed that emergency department visits and deaths increase significantly on days when the maximum heat index is 95°F as compared to days when the maximum heat index is 75°F.

They shared these findings with the National Weather Service (NWS) Northeast Region and worked with them to revise the excessive heat advisory threshold policy. Now, the NWS issues excessive heat advisories at 95°F instead of 100°F.

Activating response efforts at more moderate temperatures may help reduce individuals’ exposure to extreme heat and, subsequently, reduce the risk of heat-related illness across the Northeast.

Unique Data

All state and local tracking programs collect and display a set of standard data. But individual programs may host other data that are important to their populations. NH Tracking's unique data include the following.

Contacts

Website: www.nh.gov/epht

Email: EPHTInformation@dhhs.nh.gov

Facebook: @NHPubHealth

Twitter: @NHPubHealth

Instagram: @NHPubHealth

Resources and tools

Training sessions

The NH Tracking Program provides training on the NH Tracking site and Social Vulnerability Index Tool at regional public health network locations throughout the year.

  1. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention