Travis Business Advisors Podcast | TBA Podcast
I’m Slava Davidenko, founder of Travis Business Advisors, ABBA, IBBA and TABB member, Accredited Business Intermediary, Chicago GSB MBA.
I have 35 years of leadership experience in investing, operations and high-stakes deals. I’m building an Austin advisory for small and medium sized businesses.
On this channel, I share insights for Austin business owners planning an exit and buyers, planning to buy business located in Austin - whether five years away from the deal or just three months.
If you own a car wash, dental or veterinary practice, private school or education center, self-storage, or senior care - selling isn’t simple. Valuation, structure, taxes, transition, real estate, growth story - every decision affects your outcome.
Most brokers oversimplify. I don’t.
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DISCLAIMER: This content is for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal, tax, financial, or investment advice. Always consult qualified professionals. Individual results vary significantly.
Travis Business Advisors Podcast | TBA Podcast
Zip Codes and Health: How Where You Live Shapes Your Wellbeing
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We examine how urban environments actively shape our health beyond individual choices about diet and exercise, diving into a comprehensive WalletHub study that ranked 182 US cities based on healthcare, food, fitness and green space metrics.
• San Francisco tops the health rankings with exceptional walkability, diverse food options, quality parks, and an 18% obesity rate
• Honolulu stands out with 90%/98% health insurance coverage for adults/kids and the most farmers markets and hiking trails per capita
• Seattle, Salt Lake City, San Diego and Portland excel through combinations of green space, healthcare access, and fitness opportunities
• Brownsville, Texas ranks last with severely limited access to healthy food, exercise facilities, and green spaces
• Other struggling cities (Gulfport, Shreveport, Columbus) show similar patterns of inadequate infrastructure and resources
• Major cities show surprising results: NYC (19th), LA (13th), Chicago (28th), Houston (93rd)
• Environmental factors and infrastructure significantly impact health outcomes regardless of individual willpower
• Improving community health requires investment in public resources, especially in struggling neighborhoods
Your ZIP code may be the most significant health choice you'll ever make. Consider your own neighborhood – what makes it easier or harder to be healthy? By understanding these environmental factors, we can work together to create healthier communities for everyone.
🔎 Explore more resources:
📚 Business sale case studies - see how companies were prepared and sold
https://travisbusinessadvisors.com/case-studies
📊 Visual infographics about selling a business - key numbers, timelines, and exit strategies
https://travisbusinessadvisors.com/infographics
🧰 Try useful tools for business owners - valuation insights and preparation resources
https://travisbusinessadvisors.com/tools
🏢 Industries we work with - learn which businesses we help prepare for sale
https://travisbusinessadvisors.com/industries
⚠️ Disclaimer: All scenarios are composite, hypothetical, or modified for confidentiality — no real transactions are depicted. Financial outcomes are illustrative only, not guarantees. This content is educational only and does not constitute legal, tax, financial, or brokerage advice. No professional-client relationship is created. Consult qualified professionals before making any business decisions.
Welcome to the Deep Dive. You know you sent over some really interesting stuff this week Lots of sources, your notes all pointing towards this idea about where we live and, well, our health.
Speaker 2Exactly. We often focus on you know what we do diet, exercise but these sources push us to think bigger.
Welcome to The Deep Dive
Speaker 1Right Beyond just individual choices, and your materials really highlighted how the cities we actually live in aren't just backgrounds, they actively sort of shape our health.
Speaker 2They absolutely do, and that's what we're digging into how these urban environments can either help or hinder us, often in ways we don't even realize.
Speaker 1Yeah, and the big piece you shared was that WalletHub study looked at what 182 of the biggest US cities that's the one 182 most populous cities.
Speaker 2Yeah, trying to figure out how healthy these places actually are to live in.
Speaker 1So our mission for this deep dive is basically to unpack that study. See what it tells us about how city life impacts well-being.
Speaker 2And it's quite detailed. They didn't just look at one or two things. They broke it down into four main areas.
Speaker 1Okay, what are those?
Speaker 2Healthcare, food, fitness and green space, and within those four, they used 41 specific indicators.
Speaker 1Oh, 41. That's a lot.
Speaker 2Like what kind of specifics are we talking about? Well, think about things like premature death rates or how many fruits and veggies people actually eat, Even the number of farmer's markets, how much medical care costs, how many gyms there are, park quality. It's pretty comprehensive.
Speaker 1Right, so not just if there's a park, but is it actually a decent park? You'd want to use Makes sense? How do they compare cities on all this stuff, like apples to oranges, right?
Speaker 2They used a 100 point scale for each metric. Simple idea Higher score means the city does better on that specific thing, supports healthy living more.
Speaker 1Gotcha.
Speaker 2Then they kind of pulled all that together into one overall health score for each city. It was weighted too, meaning some factors counted more than others, based on, you know, their known impact on health.
Speaker 1And the data came from solid sources.
Speaker 2Oh yeah, us Census Bureau, cdc, reputable places, so it's grounded in well actual data.
Speaker 1Okay, good. So we've got this detailed data-driven picture. Let's get into it. Who aced the test? Which cities are these like shining examples you mentioned where healthy living is easier?
Speaker 2Well topping the list. Number one is San Francisco. Okay, I can maybe see that the study points to how easy it is to walk there. Loads of healthy food options and they called the green spaces finest. Really strong praise.
Speaker 1Yeah, sf is definitely known for being walkable and the food scene. I mean you can find anything there. They mentioned a low obesity rate too. Right, like 18 percent.
Speaker 2Exactly 18 percent, which is, you know, pretty low nationally. It really suggests the city's setup helps. They highlighted investment in parks, recreation, plus all those food options gluten-free, vegetarian, you name it.
Speaker 1So it's less about pure willpower and more that. The healthy choice is just easier to make there.
Speaker 2That seems to be the idea. The environment itself nudges people in a healthier direction.
Speaker 1Interesting. Okay so urban design, food availability, key factors. Who's number two?
Speaker 2Number two is Honolulu, and while you might think beaches, the study actually focused more on its public health strengths.
Speaker 1Oh, really, more than just nice scenery.
Speaker 2Definitely. They have really high health insurance rates, like 90% for adults, 98% for kids. That's huge Basic access to care.
Speaker 1Wow, okay, that's fundamental.
Speaker 2And get this. Honolulu has the most farmers markets and the most hiking trails per person in the whole country.
Speaker 1Per person, not just total numbers.
Speaker 2Per person. So proportionally, access to fresh food and places to hike is just incredibly high. Again, the environment making it easier.
Speaker 1That's impressive. Okay, number three was Seattle right, despite the rain.
Speaker 2Huh, yeah, I said, despite the rain. The study linked its high rank to how active residences are and the sheer amount of green space, that Pacific Northwest outdoorsy thing. They noted the city keeps its parks up well and that people there seem generally health conscious, even looking at like online search trends for health topics.
Speaker 1So people there just find ways to stay active regardless of the drizzle. Oh, okay, and number four.
Speaker 2Salt Lake City. It's big strengths for fitness and healthcare. Access Ranked really high for gyms and green space.
Speaker 1Making it easier to be active all year round, maybe.
Speaker 2Seems likely that combo of places to go and good healthcare access is a strong foundation.
Speaker 1Yeah seeing a pattern here Green space, ways to be active, food, health care. You also mentioned some others in the top 10 briefly San Diego, portland, denver.
Speaker 2Right, San Diego, you've got the great climate, obviously, plus a real wellness focus and good food. Portland, big on being green, good health care access, lots of bike paths.
Speaker 1Makes sense for Portland.
Speaker 2Denver tons of outdoor recreation, healthy food focus, good access to gyms and parks. Minneapolis may be surprising with the cold, but strong health care and good, healthy food options. Washington DC has a great food scene, good fitness and park access, pretty walkable too, and Huntington Beach down in California known for its fitness culture and quality health care.
Speaker 1Beach down in California, known for its fitness culture and quality health care. So a mix of things, but those core elements food, fitness spaces, green areas, health care kept popping up. Ok, let's flip the coin. What about the cities where it's well, a real struggle? The bottom of the list.
Speaker 2Yeah, the other end of the spectrum is pretty stark. Right at the bottom number 182, is Brownsville, Texas.
Speaker 1Dead last Oof what's going on there?
Speaker 2The study found it struggles across basically all categories, especially food and fitness. Really limited access to healthy food, not enough places to exercise, not enough green space.
Speaker 1So it's not just people making bad choices. The options aren't really there.
Cities Struggling with Health
Speaker 2That's exactly what it suggests. The basic building blocks for a healthy lifestyle seem to be missing for many people.
Speaker 1Man. Okay, who else is down there?
Speaker 2Number 181 is Gulfport, Mississippi. Similar story Big problems with access to nutritious food and really low-ranked green space.
Speaker 1Another case of limited resources.
Speaker 2Then Shreveport, louisiana, at 180. Third worst Challenges there include few parks, issues with health care access and, again, lack of healthy eating options.
Speaker 1Seeing include few parks, issues with health care access and, again, lack of healthy eating options, seeing a definite theme in these lower-ranked cities and 179.
Speaker 2That was Columbus Georgia. Their big issue was health care. They had the lowest score for health care overall out of all 182 cities. Plus, they also scored poorly on food and fitness.
Speaker 1Wow, lowest health care score. That, combined with the other issues, sounds really tough for residents trying to stay healthy.
Speaker 2It paints a very challenging picture. And there were others clustered near the bottom too Laredo, texas, huntington, west Virginia, corpus Christi, texas, fort Smith, arkansas, memphis, tennessee. Jackson, mississippi, fort Smith, arkansas, memphis, tennessee.
Speaker 1Jackson Mississippi. What were some of their key weaknesses? Similar patterns.
Speaker 2Pretty similar. Yeah, laredo Poor healthcare, food and fitness. Huntington Struggles with fitness facilities, green space, nutrition, medical services. Corpus Christi Low marks for healthcare quality and healthy food access. Okay, fort Smith Low scores basically everywhere, especially fitness and health care. Memphis Not enough green space, limited healthy food access. Jackson Poor fitness options, food access issues, lack of park space.
Speaker 1It's quite sobering. It sounds like these places face multiple overlapping challenges that make healthy living incredibly difficult. It's systemic.
Speaker 2Exactly Now. One of the other interesting bits from the study was how some of the biggest US cities performed.
Speaker 1You might think bigger means better resources right, yeah, you'd assume more options, more hospitals, more gyms.
Speaker 2But it wasn't always the case. Take New York City, huge place Ranked number 19. So not bad, but maybe not as high as you'd guess 19th number 19. So not bad, but maybe not as high as you'd guess. 19th Okay, they scored well in the food scene, obviously, but lower on health care and fitness availability compared to some others.
Speaker 1Hmm, that is surprising, all those resources.
Speaker 2Yeah.
How Major US Cities Compare
Speaker 1Maybe access is the issue, Cost density?
Speaker 2That could definitely be part of it. Then Los Angeles, number 13. Again, great for food, but lower scores for fitness options and medical care access.
Speaker 1So plenty to eat.
Speaker 2Yeah.
Speaker 1They'd be harder to work it off or see a doctor easily.
Speaker 2That seems to be the implication. Chicago is number 28. The study specifically mentioned its health care scores, holding it back.
Speaker 1So even in a major hub like Chicago, health care access for quality can be a drag on the overall healthiness rank.
Speaker 2Right and maybe the most surprising was Houston Huge city, big economy but ranked way down at 93.
Speaker 193rd. Wow, why so low?
Speaker 2Primarily low rankings for green space and medical access. Despite its size and economic clout, those key health infrastructure pieces seem to be lacking compared to other places.
Speaker 1Interesting.
Speaker 2And Phoenix. Phoenix was kind of middle of the road number 53. Average scores across the board more or less.
Speaker 1So the takeaway is that just being big and economically powerful doesn't automatically make a city healthy for its residents. Other factors are clearly critical.
Speaker 2Absolutely. It really drives home that point.
Speaker 1Okay, so we've looked at the top, the bottom, the big cities Pulling it all together. What are the main takeaways from this deep dive for you? The big picture implications.
Speaker 2Well, the biggest one, I think, is just how undeniable the impact of our environment is on our health. It's not just about personal choice. The place itself matters a lot.
Speaker 1Yeah, the opportunities, the resources or lack thereof.
Speaker 2Exactly. Look at San Francisco, honolulu, seattle cities that invest in healthy environments, making healthy options accessible, they tend to have healthier people.
Key Takeaways and Implications
Speaker 1And the flip side places like Brownsville or Gulfport. Their problems aren't just about individuals needing to try harder.
Speaker 2Right. The study makes it clear these are often system-wide issues. You can't just tell people to eat better if there are no grocery stores with fresh produce nearby. You know.
Speaker 1Or tell them to exercise if there are no safe parks or affordable gyms.
Speaker 2Precisely. It points to a need for real investment in public health, in infrastructure, in neighborhood resources, especially in those communities that are struggling.
Speaker 1So it's a call to action that goes way beyond just telling people to eat their vegetable.
Speaker 2Definitely. It involves city planners, policymakers, community members, everyone really pushing for changes that make healthy living the easy choice, or at least an available choice for everyone.
Speaker 1It makes that quote from the study really hit home. Your ZIP code may be the most significant health choice you'll ever make.
Speaker 2It's a powerful statement, isn't it Really underscores how tied our well-being is to the places we live.
Speaker 1So, wrapping up this deep dive, the core message seems crystal clear Our surroundings profoundly shape our health, maybe more than we think day to day.
Speaker 2For sure, and maybe that leaves us with something for everyone listening to think about. Just consider your own community, your own neighborhood. What's around you? What makes it easier to be healthy? What makes it harder? Are there parks, safe places to walk, good grocery stores, affordable health care?
Speaker 1Just noticing those things.
Speaker 2Exactly Just noticing the health landscape of where you live, understanding those environmental factors. Maybe it empowers us, helps us think differently about health and maybe even encourages some folks to educate for making their own ZIP code a healthier place to be.
Speaker 1A really important perspective. Thanks for joining us for this really eye-opening deep dive.