Pandemic Housing Policy: Examining the Relationship Among Eviction, Housing Instability, Health Inequity, and COVID-19 Transmission

Author(s):  
Emily Benfer ◽  
David Vlahov ◽  
Marissa Long ◽  
Evan Walker-Wells ◽  
J.L. Pottenger ◽  
...  
Author(s):  
Emily A. Benfer ◽  
David Vlahov ◽  
Marissa Y. Long ◽  
Evan Walker-Wells ◽  
J. L. Pottenger ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Daniel A. Hartley

A number of studies have explored the relationship between public housing policy, poverty, and crime. This Commentary discusses the results of a recent study, which investigated the effects of closing large public housing developments on crime. To see if the demolitions—and the associated deconcentration of poverty—reduced crime or merely displaced it, researchers examined the case of Chicago. They found that closing large public housing developments and dispersing former residents throughout a wider portion of the city was associated with net reductions in violent crime, at the city level.


2019 ◽  
Vol 3 (s1) ◽  
pp. 96-97
Author(s):  
Kelley N. Robinson ◽  
Kelly Bower ◽  
Jennifer Stewart ◽  
Nancy Perrin ◽  
Nancy Glass ◽  
...  

OBJECTIVES/SPECIFIC AIMS: To examine maternal morbidity and its related social determinants among women experiencing homelessness during pregnancy. METHODS/STUDY POPULATION: This study will use an exploratory sequential mixed method design to explore and examine the structural, interpersonal and individual factors contributing to maternal morbidity among a convenience sample of 150 English speaking women experiencing homelessness during a pregnancy within the last 3 years in Baltimore. In the qualitative phase of the study, we will conduct semi-structured interviews with 15 women purposively sampled to refine the relationships between resilience, social determinants of health and multilevel factors that impact maternal morbidities. Factors of interest include prenatal care received, barriers and facilitators to receiving prenatal care, maternal morbidities, social support, and strategies used to manage their condition during this time. Using the findings from the qualitative phase, a quantitative survey will be developed to gather data on topics that emerged in the interviews. In addition, the Housing Instability Index will be used to measure the degree of homelessness as defined by the degree of housing instability in a 6-month period. Using the 25-item Connor-Davidson Resilience Scale, resilience levels among women in the sample will be assessed as a moderating factor in the examination of the relationship between a pregnant woman’s homeless status and maternal morbidity. Descriptive statistics and logistical regression tests will be used to analyze these relationships while controlling for other structural, interpersonal, and individual factors that may be associated with maternal morbidity. RESULTS/ANTICIPATED RESULTS: Qualitatively we expect to gain insight into the relationship between the extrinsic and intrinsic factors impacting maternal morbidities and the health behaviors and practices used by women to manage their pregnancy while homeless. These findings will inform the quantitative survey development and help generalize the quantitative findings. We expect to identify the common morbidities in this population we anticipate that there will be differences in maternal morbidity among the different types of homelessness. Maternal morbidity will be higher among women with a greater degree of homelessness. Resilience will have a moderating effect on the relationship between homelessness and maternal morbidity. DISCUSSION/SIGNIFICANCE OF IMPACT: This study, to our knowledge, is the first to look at maternal morbidity in this population. Additionally, this study seeks to move current research from examining infant outcomes at birth among mothers experiencing homelessness to understanding the maternal morbidities during this period. Long term, good maternal health has significant implications for the health of a mother’s future pregnancies and a risk reduction of adverse chronic conditions. Study results will provide the preliminary knowledge needed to guide further research leading to clinical approaches that promote better maternal health in this population. Lastly, the study findings will inform policy by characterizing the quality and strength of evidence of the adverse maternal health effects associated with the experience of homelessness.


2021 ◽  
Vol 98 (1) ◽  
pp. 159-159 ◽  
Author(s):  
Emily A. Benfer ◽  
David Vlahov ◽  
Marissa Y. Long ◽  
Evan Walker-Wells ◽  
J. L. Pottenger ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
pp. 097300522097908
Author(s):  
Poulomi Roy ◽  
Tanmoyee Banerjee

This article examines the relationship between the indoor carbon monoxide parts per million (CO-ppm) concentration generated from cooking with biomass fuel and the popular housing policy, Indira Awas Yojana (IAY)/Pradhan Mantri Gramin Awas Yojana of the Government of India that aims at building brick (pucca) houses for a rural population of India. This article is based on a primary survey carried out in two districts of West Bengal, India, covering 360 households. The concentration of CO-ppm in the in-house air was recorded for each surveyed houses at the 10-min interval for an approximately 24-h period using EL-USB-CO data logger (Lascar Electronics, Erie PA, USA). Also, different socio-economic and demographic information was collected using the interview method for each surveyed household. The results indicate positive and significant mean CO-ppm concentration gap for the non-IAY houses over IAY houses over different quantiles of mean CO-ppm distribution. Mean CO-ppm is 4.34 points significantly lower in homes built up under the housing scheme at 50th quantile. The results point out the importance of planned housing and benefit of concrete houses in our survey areas. Housing policies should aim at building a properly designed home with ventilation facilities for minimising CO concentration in dwellings.


Author(s):  
Kelly Ray Knight

addicted.pregnant.poor is an ethnography addressing the biomedical, social, political, and ethical dimensions of ongoing illicit drug use during pregnancy. A result of four years of fieldwork in daily-rent hotels – privately owned buildings in which the exploitation of women’s sex work and on-going poor health was normative – the book follows nineteen women who had twenty-three pregnancies. To answer the question ‘What forms of life are possible here?’ I engaged with the social actors who are called upon to produce knowledge about addicted pregnancy, including addicted, pregnant women; an anthropologist; public health epidemiologists; advocates; social policymakers; treatment professionals; bureaucrats; and scientists. In this essay, I describe the relationship between the scientific contours of reproductive health and the personal and social consequences of pregnancy in the context of addiction and housing instability. Pregnant women in the daily-rent hotels existed within multiple temporalities. Here I explore what an ethnographic understanding of memorial time and biomedical time can teach us about the vital politics of viability at work in addicted pregnancy.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document