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Housing as a Social Determinant of Health: Evidence from Singapore, the UK, and Kenya: the 3-D Commission

Housing is a paradigmatic example of a social determinant of health, as it influences and is influenced by structural determinants, such as social, macroeconomic, and public policies, politics, education, income, and ethnicity/race, all intersecting to shaping the health and well-being of population...

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Autores principales: Mwoka, Meggie, Biermann, Olivia, Ettman, Catherine K., Abdalla, Salma M, Ambuko, Jane, Pearson, Mark, Rashid, Sabina Faiz, Zeinali, Zahra, Galea, Sandro, Valladares, Laura Magaña, Mberu, Blessing
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Springer US 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8415197/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34480327
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11524-021-00557-8
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author Mwoka, Meggie
Biermann, Olivia
Ettman, Catherine K.
Abdalla, Salma M
Ambuko, Jane
Pearson, Mark
Rashid, Sabina Faiz
Zeinali, Zahra
Galea, Sandro
Valladares, Laura Magaña
Mberu, Blessing
author_facet Mwoka, Meggie
Biermann, Olivia
Ettman, Catherine K.
Abdalla, Salma M
Ambuko, Jane
Pearson, Mark
Rashid, Sabina Faiz
Zeinali, Zahra
Galea, Sandro
Valladares, Laura Magaña
Mberu, Blessing
author_sort Mwoka, Meggie
collection PubMed
description Housing is a paradigmatic example of a social determinant of health, as it influences and is influenced by structural determinants, such as social, macroeconomic, and public policies, politics, education, income, and ethnicity/race, all intersecting to shaping the health and well-being of populations. It can therefore be argued that housing policy is critically linked to health policy. However, the extent to which this linkage is understood and addressed in public policies is limited and highly diverse across and within countries. This analysis seeks to describe the linkages between housing policies and health and well-being using examples from three countries at different levels of the wealth spectrum: Singapore, the UK, and Kenya. We conducted a comparative policy analysis across three country contexts (Singapore, the UK, and Kenya) to document the extent to which housing policies address health and well-being, highlighting commonalities and differences among them. To guide our analysis, we used the United Nations (UN) definition of adequate housing as it offers a broad framework to analyze the impact of housing on health and well-being. The anatomy of housing policies has a strong correlation to the provision of adequate housing across Singapore, the UK, and Kenya, especially for vulnerable groups. The paper demonstrates that contextual factors including population composition (i.e., aging versus youthful), political ideologies, legal frameworks (i.e., welfare versus market-based provision of housing), and presence (or absence) of adequate, quality, timely, reliable, robust data systems for decision-making, which are taken up by stakeholders/state, have strong implications of the type of housing policies developed and implemented, in turn directly and indirectly impacting the overall health and well-being of populations. This analysis demonstrates the value of viewing housing policies as public health policies that could significantly impact the health and well-being of populations, especially vulnerable groups. Moreover, the findings highlight the importance of the Health in All Policies approach to facilitate integrated policy responses to address social determinants of health such as housing. This is more critical than ever, given the context of the global pandemic that has led to worsening overall health and well-being.
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spelling pubmed-84151972021-09-07 Housing as a Social Determinant of Health: Evidence from Singapore, the UK, and Kenya: the 3-D Commission Mwoka, Meggie Biermann, Olivia Ettman, Catherine K. Abdalla, Salma M Ambuko, Jane Pearson, Mark Rashid, Sabina Faiz Zeinali, Zahra Galea, Sandro Valladares, Laura Magaña Mberu, Blessing J Urban Health Article Housing is a paradigmatic example of a social determinant of health, as it influences and is influenced by structural determinants, such as social, macroeconomic, and public policies, politics, education, income, and ethnicity/race, all intersecting to shaping the health and well-being of populations. It can therefore be argued that housing policy is critically linked to health policy. However, the extent to which this linkage is understood and addressed in public policies is limited and highly diverse across and within countries. This analysis seeks to describe the linkages between housing policies and health and well-being using examples from three countries at different levels of the wealth spectrum: Singapore, the UK, and Kenya. We conducted a comparative policy analysis across three country contexts (Singapore, the UK, and Kenya) to document the extent to which housing policies address health and well-being, highlighting commonalities and differences among them. To guide our analysis, we used the United Nations (UN) definition of adequate housing as it offers a broad framework to analyze the impact of housing on health and well-being. The anatomy of housing policies has a strong correlation to the provision of adequate housing across Singapore, the UK, and Kenya, especially for vulnerable groups. The paper demonstrates that contextual factors including population composition (i.e., aging versus youthful), political ideologies, legal frameworks (i.e., welfare versus market-based provision of housing), and presence (or absence) of adequate, quality, timely, reliable, robust data systems for decision-making, which are taken up by stakeholders/state, have strong implications of the type of housing policies developed and implemented, in turn directly and indirectly impacting the overall health and well-being of populations. This analysis demonstrates the value of viewing housing policies as public health policies that could significantly impact the health and well-being of populations, especially vulnerable groups. Moreover, the findings highlight the importance of the Health in All Policies approach to facilitate integrated policy responses to address social determinants of health such as housing. This is more critical than ever, given the context of the global pandemic that has led to worsening overall health and well-being. Springer US 2021-09-03 2021-08 /pmc/articles/PMC8415197/ /pubmed/34480327 http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11524-021-00557-8 Text en © The New York Academy of Medicine 2021
spellingShingle Article
Mwoka, Meggie
Biermann, Olivia
Ettman, Catherine K.
Abdalla, Salma M
Ambuko, Jane
Pearson, Mark
Rashid, Sabina Faiz
Zeinali, Zahra
Galea, Sandro
Valladares, Laura Magaña
Mberu, Blessing
Housing as a Social Determinant of Health: Evidence from Singapore, the UK, and Kenya: the 3-D Commission
title Housing as a Social Determinant of Health: Evidence from Singapore, the UK, and Kenya: the 3-D Commission
title_full Housing as a Social Determinant of Health: Evidence from Singapore, the UK, and Kenya: the 3-D Commission
title_fullStr Housing as a Social Determinant of Health: Evidence from Singapore, the UK, and Kenya: the 3-D Commission
title_full_unstemmed Housing as a Social Determinant of Health: Evidence from Singapore, the UK, and Kenya: the 3-D Commission
title_short Housing as a Social Determinant of Health: Evidence from Singapore, the UK, and Kenya: the 3-D Commission
title_sort housing as a social determinant of health: evidence from singapore, the uk, and kenya: the 3-d commission
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8415197/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34480327
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11524-021-00557-8
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