The IDA program
The IDA program (Individual Development and Adaptation) is a large ongoing longitudinal research program that has followed people from their childhood when they went to school in the Swedish town Örebro in the middle of the 1960s. The IDA program, previously named The Örebro Project, has thus far contributed with a large amount of knowledge about people's development. The programme has produced nearly 500 publications, about 150 of which are internationally peer-reviewed articles.
About the IDA programme
The IDA programme (Individual Development and Adaptation) is a large ongoing longitudinal research programme that has followed people from their childhood when they went to school in the Swedish town Örebro in the middle of 1960s. The IDA programme, previously named The Örebro Project, has thus far contributed with a huge amount of knowledge about people's development and the programme has produced nearly 500 publications, about 150 of which are internationally peer-reviewed articles.
The IDA programme started as a school research project and in the first data collection in 1965, three complete grades of inhabitants in Örebro were included, with almost 1300 children in every cohort (3rd grade, 6th grade and 8th grade). The two younger grades (3rd grade: the main group, born in 1955 and 6th grade: the pilot group, born in 1952) have since been followed in repeated data collections up to the age of adult. Enormous information has been collected, concerning intelligence, school performance, family background, self-experienced school adaptation, teacher's assessment of different behaviors, social relations, norms, self-declared symptoms and criminalities. In the adult age, the choice of study and occupation has also been studied, as well as working conditions, education, family life etc.. Comprehensive data collections have been done for the main group at the age of 43 (women) and 47 (men). The women also underwent a medical survey.
The dropping off has been low all through the time and there is a good "spirit of project" in participants, which gives a good reason for further successful data collections. Together with the so-called BETULA programme, the IDA programme is the largest longitudinal research programme in psychology in the Nordic countries.
The IDA programme has been internationally referred to as one of the most important longitudinal studies that has ever been carried out. In Contemporary Psychology, in one review of a book about the IDA programme, Professor Richard Lerner, an internationally leading development psychologist, commented on the IDA programme in the following way: To the extent that this research is the exemplar of the importance of what may be a new theoretical paradigm - not only for developmental psychology but also for the study of human development in general (cf. Bandura, 1986) - then Magnussons' IDA-project may be the single most important longitudinal study of this century.
Background and purpose
The main goal of the IDA programme is to understand people's adaptation processes in a lifelong perspective and the programme would like to to contribute to the knowledge about the mechanism that directs individuals' development to, for example, various career paths and the patterns of adaptation in adult age.
Since the very beginning, a holistic-interactionist perspective has been established in the IDA programme where the individual, as a functional entirety, is emphasized. It had several consequences. Partly, in the data collection of the IDA programme, we tried, as long as it is possible, to capture various aspects of importance in an individual's development and capacity as well as non-psychological aspects. Partly a comprehensive theoretical development work has been carried out within the programme concerning the interactionist research paradigm, and it has been further developed into the person-oriented attempt, both theoretically and statistically by the invention of the statistical package (SLEIPNER). The IDA programme also emphasizes on empirical research. Therefore, the programme also includes developments of theories and methods.
Data collections
Description of Data Collections
What data is collected?
In the ongoing data collection (2023-2025), we collect research data via both surveys,
registers and individual testing of participants. The data includes information on subjective well-being and health, relationships, pain and safety. Register data is collected from Statistics Sweden (SCB), the Crime Prevention Council (BRÅ), and the National Board of Health and Welfare. Register data provides information on medical history, demographic variables, exposure to crime, etc. Some participants in the IDA program also undergo a more extensive examination of health, brain structure and function, and cognitive abilities.
Principal Investigators
The IDA programme started in 1964-1965 and was managed by Professor David Magnusson until 1996 when Professor Lars R. Bergman took over the resposibility. Bergman was in charge of the programme until 2011. Professor Henrik Andershed and professor Anna-Karin Andershed, Örebro University were in charge 2011until 2021. At present, Professor Jonas Persson is in charge of the IDA program.
Contact responsible researchers.
Financial support
The IDA programme has been financed all the time by external funds from, for example, skolöverstyrelsen, SFR, FRN, RJ och VR with the amount that varies between approximately 1,000,000 SEK to 3,000,000 SEK per year when measured by the money value nowadays. Stockholm Univerisity, where the IDA programme is managed until 2011, has also contributed with infrastrucutural support. During the whole time of the programme, we have been particular about documenting the programme scrupulously and seen to that the research is all the time carried out on the collected data. This probably has contributed to the fact that the programme has been granted external funds during all these years.