Introduction Significant rural health disparities are driven by social determinants of health (SDOH), yet existing tools like the CDC Social Vulnerability Index (SVI) and USDA Rural-Urban Continuum Codes (RUCC) inadequately capture rural-specific adversity due to national-level aggregation and geographic oversimplification. This study develops and validates the Rural Adversity and Determinants Index (RADI), a novel composite SDOH index tailored for U.S. rural counties. We hypothesized RADI would outperform SVI and RUCC in predicting adverse health outcomes and uniquely explain rural health disparities. Methods Using 1,210 non-metropolitan U.S. counties (RUCC >3), RADI was constructed via Principal Component Analysis from 18 SDOH metrics spanning income, education, infrastructure, and healthcare access. Validation against five health outcomes (premature mortality, poor/fair health, infant mortality, heart disease mortality, preventable hospital stays) included bivariate correlations, single-predictor linear regressions (comparing RADI, SVI, and RUCC via R squared), and multivariable regressions testing the unique contribution of RADI after controlling for SVI/RUCC. Results RADI significantly outperformed SVI and RUCC across all outcomes. For premature mortality, RADI explained 55.6% of variance versus SVI (37.3%) and RUCC (2.4%); for poor/fair health, RADI reached 77.2% versus SVI (50.1%). RADI correlated strongly with SVI (r = 0.708) but captured distinct adversity dimensions: RADI scores increased with geographic isolation (B = 0.0278, p<0.001 for RUCC), while SVI unexpectedly decreased (B = -0.4279, p=0.024) at high rurality. In multivariable models, RADI remained a highly significant predictor after controlling for SVI/RUCC (e.g., for premature mortality: B = 95.29, p<0.001), whereas RUCC lost significance for most outcomes. Conclusions RADI is a rigorously validated, rural-specific SDOH index that more accurately quantifies adversity than national tools. By exposing modifiable drivers like infrastructure deficits and healthcare access gaps, RADI enables precise targeting of policies and resources to reduce rural health inequities. Future work should integrate RADI into funding frameworks and expand its use in longitudinal and intervention studies.
Krishna et al. (Mon,) studied this question.