Exploring the impact of housing insecurity on the health and wellbeing of children and young people in the United Kingdom: a qualitative systematic review

IF 3.5 2区 医学 Q1 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH BMC Public Health Pub Date : 2024-09-09 DOI:10.1186/s12889-024-19735-9
Emma S. Hock, Lindsay Blank, Hannah Fairbrother, Mark Clowes, Diana Castelblanco Cuevas, Andrew Booth, Amy Clair, Elizabeth Goyder
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Abstract

Housing insecurity can be understood as experiencing or being at risk of multiple house moves that are not through choice and related to poverty. Many aspects of housing have all been shown to impact children/young people’s health and wellbeing. However, the pathways linking housing and childhood health and wellbeing are complex and poorly understood. We undertook a systematic review synthesising qualitative data on the perspectives of children/young people and those close to them, from the United Kingdom (UK). We searched databases, reference lists, and UK grey literature. We extracted and tabulated key data from the included papers, and appraised study quality. We used best fit framework synthesis combined with thematic synthesis, and generated diagrams to illustrate hypothesised causal pathways. We included 59 studies and identified four populations: those experiencing housing insecurity in general (40 papers); associated with domestic violence (nine papers); associated with migration status (13 papers); and due to demolition-related forced relocation (two papers). Housing insecurity took many forms and resulted from several interrelated situations, including eviction or a forced move, temporary accommodation, exposure to problematic behaviour, overcrowded/poor-condition/unsuitable property, and making multiple moves. Impacts included school-related, psychological, financial and family wellbeing impacts, daily long-distance travel, and poor living conditions, all of which could further exacerbate housing insecurity. People perceived that these experiences led to mental and physical health problems, tiredness and delayed development. The impact of housing insecurity was lessened by friendship and support, staying at the same school, having hope for the future, and parenting practices. The negative impacts of housing insecurity on child/adolescent health and wellbeing may be compounded by specific life circumstances, such as escaping domestic violence, migration status, or demolition-related relocation. Housing insecurity has a profound impact on children and young people. Policies should focus on reducing housing insecurity among families, particularly in relation to reducing eviction; improving, and reducing the need for, temporary accommodation; minimum requirements for property condition; and support to reduce multiple and long-distance moves. Those working with children/young people and families experiencing housing insecurity should prioritise giving them optimal choice and control over situations that affect them.
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探索住房无保障对英国儿童和青少年健康和福祉的影响:定性系统审查
住房无保障可以理解为经历或面临多次搬家的风险,这些搬家并非出于自愿,也与贫困有关。住房的许多方面都被证明会影响儿童/青少年的健康和幸福。然而,住房与儿童健康和幸福之间的联系非常复杂,人们对其了解甚少。我们对英国儿童/青少年及其亲友的观点进行了系统性综述。我们检索了数据库、参考文献目录和英国灰色文献。我们从收录的论文中提取关键数据并制成表格,同时对研究质量进行评估。我们采用了最佳拟合框架综合法与专题综合法相结合的方法,并制作了图表来说明假设的因果关系。我们纳入了 59 项研究,并确定了四类人群:住房无保障的一般人群(40 篇论文);与家庭暴力相关的人群(9 篇论文);与移民身份相关的人群(13 篇论文);以及因拆迁而被迫搬迁的人群(2 篇论文)。住房无保障有多种形式,是由几种相互关联的情况造成的,包括被驱逐或被迫搬迁、临时住处、遭遇有问题的行为、过度拥挤/条件差/不合适的房产,以及多次搬迁。影响包括与学校有关的、心理的、经济的和家庭幸福的影响,每天的长途旅行,以及恶劣的生活条件,所有这些都可能进一步加剧住房的不安全性。人们认为,这些经历导致了身心健康问题、疲倦和发育迟缓。友谊和支持、留在同一所学校、对未来充满希望以及养育子女的做法都减轻了住房无保障的影响。住房无保障对儿童/青少年健康和幸福的负面影响可能会因特定的生活环境而加剧,如逃避家庭暴力、移民身份或与拆迁有关的搬迁。住房无保障对儿童和青少年有着深远的影响。政策应侧重于减少家庭中的住房不安全问题,特别是在以下方面:减少驱逐;改善和减少对临时住所的需求;对财产状况的最低要求;以及支持减少多次和长途搬迁。与住房无保障的儿童/青少年和家庭打交道的人应优先考虑让他们对影响他们的情况有最佳的选择和控制。
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来源期刊
BMC Public Health
BMC Public Health 医学-公共卫生、环境卫生与职业卫生
CiteScore
6.50
自引率
4.40%
发文量
2108
审稿时长
1 months
期刊介绍: BMC Public Health is an open access, peer-reviewed journal that considers articles on the epidemiology of disease and the understanding of all aspects of public health. The journal has a special focus on the social determinants of health, the environmental, behavioral, and occupational correlates of health and disease, and the impact of health policies, practices and interventions on the community.
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