Given the increasing number of people in Spain struggling to
pay housing-related costs during the economic recession, it is important to
assess the health status of these communities as compared to the general
population and to better understand the different housing dimensions that are
related with poor mental health. This study aims to describe the housing
conditions and health status of a sample of people assisted by Caritas
Barcelona (Spain) and living in inadequate housing and/or struggling to pay
their rent or mortgage, to compare the health outcomes of this population with
those of the overall population of Barcelona, and to analyze the association
between housing dimensions and mental health.
We used a cross-sectional design. The participating adults (n = 320) and children (n = 177) were those
living in the dioceses of Barcelona, Sant Feliu and Terrassa (Spain) in 2012
and assisted by Cáritas. They were asked to answer to three questionnaires on
housing and health conditions. Eight health related variables were used to
compare participants with Barcelona’s residents and associations between
housing conditions and poor mental health were examined with multivariate
logistic regression models.
In Barcelona, people seeking Caritas’s help and facing
serious housing problems had a much poorer health status than the general
population, even when compared to those belonging to the most deprived social
classes. For example, 69.4 % of adult participants had poor mental health
compared to 11.5 % male and 15.2 % female Barcelona residents.
Moreover, housing conditions were associated with poor mental health.
This study has shown how, in a country hit by the financial
recession, those people facing housing problems have much worse health compared
to the general population.
Full article at: http://goo.gl/efFiDN
By: Ana M. Novoa, Julia Ward, Davide Malmusi, Fernando Díaz, Mercè Darnell, Carme Trilla, Jordi Bosch, and Carme Borrell
Agència de Salut
Pública de Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain
Institut
d’Investigació Biomèdica (IIB Sant Pau), Barcelona, Spain
Gillings School
of Global Public Health, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, USA
CIBER de
Epidemiología y Salud Pública (CIBERESP), Barcelona, Spain
Cáritas Diocesana
de Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain
Universitat
Pompeu Fabra, Barcelona, Spain
Ana M. Novoa, Email: tac.bpsa@aovona.
More at: https://twitter.com/hiv_insight
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