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Area Deprivation Index×Allostatic Load Index×
VakgebiedSocial EpidemiologySocial Epidemiology
FamilieProcess / pipelineLatent structure
Jaar van ontstaan20031997
GrondleggerGopal K. Singh; Amy J. H. Kind & William R. Buckingham (Neighborhood Atlas)Bruce McEwen & Eliot Stellar; Teresa Seeman, Burton Singer et al. (MacArthur Studies)
TypeComposite area-level socioeconomic deprivation indexComposite multi-system biomarker index of physiological dysregulation
Oorspronkelijke bronSingh, G. K. (2003). Area Deprivation and Widening Inequalities in US Mortality, 1969-1998. American Journal of Public Health, 93(7), 1137-1143. DOI ↗Seeman, T. E., Singer, B. H., Rowe, J. W., Horwitz, R. I., & McEwen, B. S. (1997). Price of Adaptation: Allostatic Load and Its Health Consequences. MacArthur Studies of Successful Aging. Archives of Internal Medicine, 157(19), 2259-2268. DOI ↗
AliassenADI, Neighborhood Deprivation Index, Singh Area Deprivation Index, Neighborhood Atlas ADIAllostatic Load Score, Cumulative Biological Risk Index, Multi-System Dysregulation Index, Allostatic Load
Verwant44
SamenvattingThe Area Deprivation Index (ADI) summarizes the socioeconomic disadvantage of a small geographic area, such as a census block group, into a single rankable score built from census indicators of income, education, employment, and housing. Gopal Singh constructed the modern US version in 2003, combining seventeen census measures with factor-analytic weights to show that area deprivation gradients in US mortality widened substantially between 1969 and 1998. Amy Kind and William Buckingham later made the index broadly usable through the Neighborhood Atlas, which publishes ADI rankings (national percentiles and state deciles) at the block-group level so researchers and clinicians can attach a neighborhood-disadvantage value to any address. The ADI sits alongside relatives such as the British Townsend and Carstairs indices in a family of composite area-deprivation measures.The allostatic load index quantifies the cumulative biological cost of chronic stress by summing dysregulation across multiple physiological systems. McEwen and Stellar introduced 'allostatic load' in 1993 to name the wear and tear the body accrues when stress-response systems are repeatedly or chronically activated, extending the idea of allostasis (stability through change) over time. Seeman, Singer, Rowe, Horwitz, and McEwen operationalized it in the MacArthur Studies of Successful Aging in 1997, scoring older adults on biomarkers spanning cardiovascular, metabolic, neuroendocrine, and immune function and counting how many fell into a high-risk range, typically the worst quartile. The resulting count index predicted later cognitive and physical decline and cardiovascular disease, establishing allostatic load as a measurable marker of cumulative physiological risk that no single clinical test captures.
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ScholarGateMethoden vergelijken: Area Deprivation Index · Allostatic Load Index. Geraadpleegd op 2026-06-25 via https://scholargate.app/nl/compare