| Literature DB >> 33805125 |
Abstract
Housing quality, stability, and affordability have a direct relationship to socioemotional and physical health. Both city planning and public health have long recognized the role of housing in health, but the complexity of this relationship in regard to infant and maternal health is less understood. Focusing on literature specifically relevant to U.S. metropolitan areas, I conduct a multidisciplinary literature review to understand the influence of housing factors and interventions that impact infant and maternal health. The paper seeks to achieve three primary goals. First, to identify the primary "pathways" by which housing influences infant and maternal health. Second, the review focuses on the role and influence of historical housing discrimination on maternal health outcomes. Third, the review identifies emergent practice-based housing interventions in planning and public health practice to support infant and maternal health. The literature suggests that the impact of housing on infant health is complex, multifaceted, and intergenerational. Historical housing discrimination also directly impacts contemporary infant and maternal health outcomes. Policy interventions to support infant health through housing are just emerging but demonstrate promising outcomes. Structural barriers to housing affordability in the United States will require new resources to foster greater collaboration between the housing and the health sectors.Entities:
Keywords: children; housing; infant health; life course; maternal health; social determinants
Year: 2021 PMID: 33805125 PMCID: PMC8037986 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph18073331
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1Black infant mortality rate by state (infant deaths per 1000 live births) in the United States in 2018 [15].
Figure 2Housing ‘pathways’ that influence infant and maternal health outcomes.
Figure 3Influence of historical forms of housing discrimination on contemporary community and health outcomes.