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Association Between Housing Affordability and Mental Health: A Longitudinal Analysis of a Nationally Representative Household Survey in Australia

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TLDR
It is found that entering unaffordable housing is detrimental to the mental health of individuals residing in low-to-moderate income households, and an association for higher income households is found.
Abstract
Evidence about the mental health consequences of unaffordable housing is limited. The authors investigated whether people whose housing costs were more than 30% of their household income experienced a deterioration in their mental health (using the Short Form 36 Mental Component Summary), over and above other forms of financial stress. They hypothesized that associations would be limited to lower income households as high housing costs would reduce their capacity to purchase other essential nonhousing needs (e.g., food). Using fixed-effects longitudinal regression, the authors analyzed 38,610 responses of 10,047 individuals aged 25-64 years who participated in the Household, Income, and Labour Dynamics in Australia (HILDA) Survey (2001-2007). Respondents included those who remained in affordable housing over 2 consecutive waves (reference group) or had moved from affordable to unaffordable housing over 2 waves (comparison group). For individuals living in low-to-moderate income households, entering unaffordable housing was associated with a small decrease in their mental health score independent of changes in equivalized household income or having moved house (mean change = -1.19, 95% confidence interval: -1.97, -0.41). The authors did not find evidence to support an association for higher income households. They found that entering unaffordable housing is detrimental to the mental health of individuals residing in low-to-moderate income households.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Housing as a determinant of health equity: A conceptual model.

TL;DR: This work synthesized literature from a diverse array of disciplines to explore the varied aspects of the relationship between housing and health and developed an original conceptual model highlighting these complexities, offering a comprehensive vision for healthy housing that situates housing's impact on health through a historical and social justice lens.
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Housing affordability and mental health: does the relationship differ for renters and home purchasers?

TL;DR: Private renters appeared to be more vulnerable than home purchasers to mental health effects of unaffordable housing, suggesting that tenure-differentiated policy responses to poor housing affordability may be appropriate.
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Housing Disadvantage and Poor Mental Health: A Systematic Review

TL;DR: A systematic review of evidence confirms that prior exposure to housing disadvantage may impact mental health later in life.
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Introduction of a National Minimum Wage Reduced Depressive Symptoms in Low-Wage Workers: A Quasi-Natural Experiment in the UK.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors compared the health effects of higher wages on recipients of the minimum wage with otherwise similar persons who were likely unaffected because their wages were between 100 and 110% of the eligibility threshold or their firms did not increase wages to meet the threshold.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A Comparative Review of Generic Quality-of-Life Instruments

TL;DR: Of the instruments reviewed, the SF-36 health survey is the most commonly used HR-QOL measure and was developed as a short-form measure of functioning and well-being in the Medical Outcomes Study.
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Housing and Public Health

TL;DR: This review takes into account the range of factors, acting at different levels, directly and indirectly, through which housing affects health and considers how the improvement of housing and neighborhoods has been a core activity of public health and a central component in tackling poverty.
Journal ArticleDOI

Housing and Mental Health: A Review of the Evidence and a Methodological and Conceptual Critique

TL;DR: The authors reviewed existing research on housing and mental health, considering housing type (single-family detached versus multiple dwelling), floor level, and housing quality (e.g., structural damage).
Journal ArticleDOI

Are neighbourhood characteristics associated with depressive symptoms? A review of evidence

TL;DR: Improving the quality of observational work through improved measurement of neighbourhood attributes, more sophisticated consideration of spatial scale, longitudinal designs and evaluation of natural experiments will strengthen inferences regarding causal effects of area attributes on depression.
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Effect of insulating existing houses on health inequality: cluster randomised study in the community

TL;DR: Insulating existing houses led to a significantly warmer, drier indoor environment and resulted in improved self rated health, self reported wheezing, days off school and work, and visits to general practitioners as well as a trend for fewer hospital admissions for respiratory conditions.
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