'That house was a home': Qualitative evidence from New Zealand on the connections between rental housing eviction and poor health outcomes.

Health Promot J Austr

He Kāinga Oranga - Housing and Health Research Programme, Department of Public Health, University of Otago, Wellington, New Zealand.

Published: July 2022

Issue Addressed: Eviction, or a forced move from rental housing, is a common experience for New Zealand renters, yet we know very little about its effects. This research investigated how eviction affects people's lives and health.

Methods: We conducted semi-structured interviews with 27 people who had experienced eviction. We coded the transcripts and grouped them into themes using template analysis.

Results: Participant experienced grief at the loss of the home. Moving out and searching for a new home was highly stressful on participants and on their relationships. After being evicted, people became homeless, often staying with family and friends and lived in poor quality or unaffordable housing. They reported health issues as a result of these circumstances.

Conclusions: Eviction harms health through causing stress, grief and a move to a risky living situation. Increasing the supply of housing and funding wide-ranging support services can help minimise the harm caused by eviction. SO WHAT?: Reducing the incidence and impact of eviction should be a priority for health promotion.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/hpja.526DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

rental housing
8
eviction
7
'that house
4
house home'
4
home' qualitative
4
qualitative evidence
4
evidence zealand
4
zealand connections
4
connections rental
4
housing
4

Similar Publications

Background: Utility services for electricity, gas, heat, and hot water are necessities for everyday activities (e.g., lighting, cooking, and thermal safety).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background And Objectives: Aging in the Right Place (AIRP), the process of occupying housing that meets one's unique preferences and needs, is a critical component of aging well. Homelessness in later life compromises AIRP. This qualitative study examined the factors that informed housing options before, during, and after episodes of homelessness in later life and the indicators of AIRP that those options embodied.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Shared equity homeownership - a model in which low- and moderate-income households purchase homes at affordable prices on the condition that the houses remain affordable upon resale - has been shown to produce several health-enhancing housing outcomes. These include permanent affordability, housing stability, and modest wealth-building. However, studies suggest low- and moderate-income households may sacrifice neighborhood quality when becoming homeowners, which can undermine the health benefits of homeownership.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Time to Take a Chance: The Promise of Royston-Parmar Proportional Hazard Models for Understanding Caseload Transitions.

Eval Rev

December 2024

Division of Family Development, New Jersey Department of Human Services, Trenton, NJ, USA.

In this letter to the editor, we compare six different event history models to estimate eligible families participated in a subsidized rental housing program and . Answering these questions can inform efforts to improve program marketing and outreach, staffing and budgeting, triage, bias identification, as well as benchmarking and evaluation. One of six specifications clearly outperforms the others and understanding how will inform similar research pursuits.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!