| Literature DB >> 35081934 |
Carly Doran1, Valorie Crooks2, Jeremy Snyder3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Online crowdfunding platforms such as GoFundMe fundraise millions of dollars annually for campaigners. Medical crowdfunding is a very popular campaign type, with campaigners often requesting funds to cover basic health and medical care needs. Here we explore the ways that health needs intersect with housing needs in Canadian crowdfunding campaigns. In Canada, both health and housing needs may be addressed through legislative or policy intervention, are public health priorities, and are perceived as entitlements related to people's basic human rights. We specifically develop a classification scheme of these intersections.Entities:
Keywords: Canada; Classification scheme; Crowdfunding; Health; Health care; Housing
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35081934 PMCID: PMC8790899 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-022-12599-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Classification Scheme Overview
| Category | Scope | Types of Needs Articulated |
|---|---|---|
| Health status creates need for housing relocation | Campaigners who needed to relocate in order to be closer to health care facilities or to improve their health | Relocation to be closer to a hospital providing ongoing treatment; Maintaining regular residence while funding temporary relocation to access treatment |
| Health status or impairment creates need for housing modification(s) | Campaigners whose health status or impairment(s) necessitated housing modifications, typically to improve accessibility | Building ramps or wheelchair turnarounds; Installing roll-in showers or ceiling tracks |
| Health status contributes to poor or no housing | Campaigners who were unable to cover housing costs, attributing this at least in part to their health and the costs associated with its maintenance (e.g., prescriptions) | Assistance with paying for some or all of rent and housing-related costs such as utilities; Costs associated with acquiring housing (e.g., first month of rent, damage deposit) |
| Deleterious housing contributing to poor health status | Campaigners living in deleterious housing that was negatively affecting their health | Assistance with covering costs of black mold removal; Costs associated with remediating structurally unsound housing (e.g., moisture in floorboards/walls, exposed electrical sockets) |
| Cycle of poor health status contributing to poor housing and the opposite | Campaigners who reported experiencing a long-term connection between poor health exacerbating poor housing and the opposite | Support to pay rent due to the inability to work; Costs of rebuilding a life shaped by multiple traumas |