Emma Baker1, Laurence Lester2, Kate Mason3, Rebecca Bentley4. 1. School of Architecture and the Built Environment, University of Adelaide, Adelaide, Australia. Emma.baker@adelaide.edu.au. 2. School of Architecture and the Built Environment, University of Adelaide, Adelaide, Australia. 3. Department of Public Health and Policy, University of Liverpool, Liverpool, UK. 4. Melbourne School of Population and Global Health, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Australia.
Abstract
PURPOSE: When housing is insufficient, or poor quality, or unaffordable there are well established health effects. Despite the pervasiveness of housing affordability problems (widely referred to as Housing Affordability Stress-HAS), little quantitative work has analysed long-term mental health effects. We examine the mental health effects of (prolonged and intermittent) patterns of exposure to housing affordability problems. METHODS: We analysed a large, nationally representative longitudinal population sample of individuals, following them over five-year periods to assess the relative mental health effects of different patterns of exposure to housing affordability problems. To maximise the number of observations and the robustness of findings, we used 15 years (2002-2016) of data, across three pooled exposure windows. Longitudinal regression analysis with Mundlak adjustment was used to estimate the association between prolonged (constant over a 5-year period) and intermittent exposure to HAS, and mental health (as measured using the SF-36 MCS). RESULTS: We found that, on average, both prolonged and intermittent exposure were associated with lower mental health (Beta = - 1.338 (95% CI - 2.178-0.488) and Beta = - 0.516 (95% CI - 0.868-0.164), respectively). When we additionally adjusted for baseline mental health, thereby accounting for initial mental health status, coefficients were attenuated but remained significant. CONCLUSIONS: Both prolonged and intermittent exposure to HAS negatively impact mental health, irrespective of baseline mental health. Interventions that target affordable housing would benefit population mental health. Mental health interventions should be designed with people's housing context in mind.
PURPOSE: When housing is insufficient, or poor quality, or unaffordable there are well established health effects. Despite the pervasiveness of housing affordability problems (widely referred to as Housing Affordability Stress-HAS), little quantitative work has analysed long-term mental health effects. We examine the mental health effects of (prolonged and intermittent) patterns of exposure to housing affordability problems. METHODS: We analysed a large, nationally representative longitudinal population sample of individuals, following them over five-year periods to assess the relative mental health effects of different patterns of exposure to housing affordability problems. To maximise the number of observations and the robustness of findings, we used 15 years (2002-2016) of data, across three pooled exposure windows. Longitudinal regression analysis with Mundlak adjustment was used to estimate the association between prolonged (constant over a 5-year period) and intermittent exposure to HAS, and mental health (as measured using the SF-36 MCS). RESULTS: We found that, on average, both prolonged and intermittent exposure were associated with lower mental health (Beta = - 1.338 (95% CI - 2.178-0.488) and Beta = - 0.516 (95% CI - 0.868-0.164), respectively). When we additionally adjusted for baseline mental health, thereby accounting for initial mental health status, coefficients were attenuated but remained significant. CONCLUSIONS: Both prolonged and intermittent exposure to HAS negatively impact mental health, irrespective of baseline mental health. Interventions that target affordable housing would benefit population mental health. Mental health interventions should be designed with people's housing context in mind.
Entities:
Keywords:
Housing affordability; Longitudinal; Mental health; Social determinants
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