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Journal Article

Citation

Jacobs DE, Wilson J, Dixon SL, Smith JL, Evens A. Environ. Health Perspect. 2009; 117(4): 597-604.

Affiliation

National Center for Healthy Housing, Columbia, Maryland 21044, USA. djacobs@nchh.org

Copyright

(Copyright © 2009, National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences)

DOI

10.1289/ehp.0800086

PMID

19440499

PMCID

PMC2679604

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: We analyzed the relationship between health status and housing quality over time. METHODS: We combined data from two nationally representative longitudinal surveys of the U.S. population and its housing, the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey and the American Housing Survey, respectively. We identified housing and health trends from approximately 1970 to 2000, after excluding those trends for which data were missing or where we found no plausible association or change in trend. RESULTS: Changes in housing include construction type, proportion of rental versus home ownership, age, density, size, moisture, pests, broken windows, ventilation and air conditioning, and water leaks. Changes in health measures include asthma, respiratory illness, obesity and diabetes, and lead poisoning, among others. The results suggest ecologic trends in childhood lead poisoning follow housing age, water leaks, and ventilation; asthma follows ventilation, windows, and age; overweight trends follow ventilation; blood pressure trends follow community measures; and health disparities have not changed greatly. CONCLUSIONS: Housing trends are consistent with certain health trends over time. Future national longitudinal surveys should include health, housing, and community metrics within a single integrated design, instead of separate surveys, in order to develop reliable indicators of how housing changes affect population health and how to best target resources. Little progress has been made in reducing the health and housing disparities of disadvantaged groups, with the notable exception of childhood lead poisoning caused by exposure to lead-based paint hazards. Use of these and other data sets to create reliable integrated indicators of health and housing quality are needed.


Language: en

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