Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality's (AHRQ) database on Social Determinants of Health (SDOH) was created under a project funded by the Patient Centered Outcomes Research (PCOR) Trust Fund. The purpose of this project is to create easy to use, easily linkable SDOH-focused data to use in PCOR research, inform approaches to address emerging health issues, and ultimately contribute to improved health outcomes. https://www.ahrq.gov/sdoh/data-analytics/sdoh-data.html
Materials developed by HHS AHRQ. Reference to specific commercial products, manufacturers, companies, or trademarks does not constitute its endorsement or recommendation by the U.S. Government, Department of Health and Human Services, or Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Access Citation
Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality. Social Determinants of Health Database | Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality. Social Determinants of Health Database. June 2023. [Access date: Month Day, Year]. https://www.ahrq.gov/sdoh/data-analytics/sdoh-data.html.
US Census, American Hospital Association, Area Health Resoureces File
Funding Agency
Patient Centered Outcomes Research (PCOR)
Keywords
SDH, Social Determinants of Health, emerging health issues, improved health outcomes, poverty, environment,
Topic Classification
Health and Health Care
Subject
Health Disparities, Income/Financial Security, Financial Stress, Access to Healthcare
Analysis Unit
Census Tract
Universe
US
Geographic Unit
county, census tract, ZCTA
Data Collection Start
2020
Data Collection End
2020
Time Unit
year
Geographic Coverage
US
Geographic Coverage States
UT, ID, MT, WY, NV, all states and DC
Observation Count
GIS Join Name
GIS Join ID
Geographic Bounding Box SW
Geographic Bounding Box NE
Geographic Bounding Box
Notes
The origin of the datasets comes from multiple sources. Should I include all references in the data origin row as there are too many of them?
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Community Resilience Estimates
The Community resilience is the capacity of individuals and households to absorb, endure, and recover from the health, social, and economic impacts of a disaster such as a hurricane or pandemic. Estimates at the tract and county level are calculated by modeling individual and household characteristics, including poverty, crowding, and unemployment, from the 2019 ACS. https://www.census.gov/programs-surveys/community-resilience-estimates.html
Materials developed by the United States Census Bureau. Reference to specific commercial products, manufacturers, companies, or trademarks does not constitute its endorsement or recommendation by the U.S. Government or US Census Bureau. All data is available on Census Bureau website free of charge.
Access Citation
US Census Bureau. Community Resilience Estimates. Census.gov. July 16, 2024. [Access date: Month Day, Year]. https://www.census.gov/programs-surveys/community-resilience-estimates.html.
health impacts, social impacts, economic impacts, poverty, crowding, unemployment
Topic Classification
Health and Health Care, Finances, Employment
Subject
Health Disparities, unemployment, Financial stress
Analysis Unit
Census Tract
Universe
US
Geographic Unit
US, state, county, census tract
Data Collection Start
2021
Data Collection End
2021
Time Unit
year
Geographic Coverage
US
Geographic Coverage States
UT, ID, MT, WY, NV, all states and DC
Observation Count
87609
GIS Join Name
GIS Join ID
Geographic Bounding Box SW
Geographic Bounding Box NE
Geographic Bounding Box
Notes
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Social Deprivation Index
The Social Deprivation Index (SDI) measures were initially developed by Butler et al. (2012) using 2005–2009 American Community Survey (ACS) 5-year estimates and calculated at the Primary Care Service Areas (PCSA). This measure was updated 1) with more recent ACS data (5-year estimates) and 2) using additional areas: counties, census tract, Zip Code Tabulation Areas (ZCTA), and PCSAs. https://www.graham-center.org/maps-data-tools/social-deprivation-index.html
All data, materials, content, and intellectual property contained on the AAFP Robert Graham Center website is the property of the AAFP and is protected by copyright and trademark law. The AAFP grants you a limited, personal, non-exclusive, non-transferable, revocable license to access and use the Website for your personal, non-commercial use only, subject to your acceptance of, and compliance with, the terms of use.
Access Citation
Social deprivation index (SDI). Robert Graham Center - Policy Studies in Family Medicine & Primary Care. (2018, November 5). [Access date: Month Day, Year], from https://www.graham-center.org/rgc/maps-data-tools/sdi/social-deprivation-index.html.
contact email policy@aafp.org?
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U.S. Chronic Disease Indicators
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) Division of Population Health provides cross-cutting set of 124 indicators that were developed by consensus and that allows states and territories and large metropolitan areas to uniformly define, collect, and report chronic disease data that are important to public health practice and available for states, territories and large metropolitan areas. In addition to providing access to state-specific indicator data, the Chronic Disease Indicators (CDI) web site serves as a gateway to additional information and data resources. https://catalog.data.gov/dataset/u-s-chronic-disease-indicators-cdi
Materials developed by CDC and Data.gov. Reference to specific commercial products, manufacturers, companies, or trademarks does not constitute its endorsement or recommendation by the U.S. Government, Department of Health and Human Services, or Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. All data is available on CDC and Data.gov website free of charge.
Access Citation
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). U.S. Department of Health & Human Services - U.S. Chronic Disease Indicators (CDI), 2023 release. U.S. Chronic Disease Indicators (CDI), 2023 Release. April 2, 2024. [Access date: Month Day, Year]. https://catalog.data.gov/dataset/u-s-chronic-disease-indicators-cdi.