干预贫困、住房条件差和健康状况差的恶性循环:住房提供者在提高租户精神健康方面的作用。

Lisa Garnham, Steve Rolfe, Isobel Anderson, Pete Seaman, Jon Godwin, Cam Donaldson
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引用次数: 0

摘要

贫困、住房条件差和健康状况不佳之间存在着复杂的相互联系,这种循环已被证明对住房提供者或政策制定者的干预具有阻力。研究通常侧重于住房的实际缺陷所产生的影响,特别是对(身体)疾病发生率的影响。而对于住房服务如何促进积极健康,尤其是幸福感的产生,研究相对较少。本文利用 75 名社会和私人出租房租户的定性数据,介绍了一个研究项目的结果,该项目跟踪了苏格兰大格拉斯哥地区租户在新租约第一年的经历。该项目收集了租户对住房和住房服务质量、经济应对能力以及健康和幸福感的看法,并利用现实主义评估原则对这些数据进行了分析,以阐明影响和因果关系。能够建立家的感觉是租户幸福的关键。家为许多租户提供了一个休养生息的空间,使他们能够躲避日常的压力,同时也是自主性和社会地位的来源。住房服务、房产质量和可负担性等方面都是家的感觉的基础,住房提供者有可能对这些方面进行干预。这些发现提出了英国社会住房提供者和私人租赁市场在多大程度上能够满足弱势租户需求的问题。这些研究结果表明,要成功地干预贫困、住房条件差和健康状况差的恶性循环,就必须采取超出提供基本住房范围的住房供应方法。
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Intervening in the cycle of poverty, poor housing and poor health: the role of housing providers in enhancing tenants' mental wellbeing.

Poverty, poor housing and poor health are complexly interconnected in a cycle that has proven resistant to intervention by housing providers or policy makers. Research often focuses on the impacts of the physical housing defects, particularly upon rates of (physical) illness and disease. There has been comparatively little research into the ways in which housing services can underpin the generation of positive health and, especially, wellbeing. Drawing on qualitative data from 75 tenants in the social and private rented sectors, this paper describes the findings of a research project that tracked tenants' experiences across their first year in a new tenancy in Greater Glasgow, Scotland. The project collected data on tenants' perceptions of housing and housing service quality, financial coping and health and wellbeing, which was analysed using the principles of Realist Evaluation to elucidate impacts and causal pathways. Being able to establish a sense of home was key to tenants' wellbeing. The home provided many tenants with a recuperative space in which to shelter from daily stressors and was a source of autonomy and social status. A sense of home was underpinned by aspects of the housing service, property quality and affordability which are potentially amenable to intervention by housing providers. These findings raise questions about the extent to which social housing providers and the private rental market in the UK are able to meet the needs of vulnerable tenants. They suggest that approaches to housing provision that go beyond providing a basic dwelling are needed to successfully intervene in the cycle of poverty, poor housing and poor health.

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