Inequalities in overcrowding in households with children in an ethnically diverse urban population: a cross-sectional study using linked health and housing records.

IF 1.6 Q3 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES
International Journal of Population Data Science Pub Date : 2025-01-23 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.23889/ijpds.v10i2.2408
Marta Wilk, Gill Harper, Silvia Liverani, Nicola Firman, Paul Simon, Carol Dezateux
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Abstract

Introduction: Household overcrowding is an important determinant of health and is associated with adverse child health, educational and social outcomes.

Objectives: We aimed to determine whether households with dependent children were more likely to be overcrowded after taking into account household ethnicity and housing tenure in an urban, ethnically diverse, and disadvantaged London population by pseudonymously linking health and property data.

Methods: We used pseudonymised Unique Property Reference Numbers to link electronic health records to Energy Performance Certificate property data in north-east London and identified 332,473 households comprising 1,093,047 people. Our primary outcomes were overcrowding measures based on a bedroom standard and a space standard (space per person; m2). We examined household level associations of overcrowding with presence of children in the household before and after adjusting for household ethnicity and tenure. We used multivariable logistic regression to estimate the adjusted odds (aOR) and 95% Confidence Intervals (CI) of bedroom standard overcrowding and linear regression to estimate effects (95% CI) on space per person.

Results: Overall, 42.8% (142,401/332,473) of households included children, 54.5% were of White household ethnicity, and 58.4% in private or social rented accommodation. 22.5% (32,075/142,401) and 45.9% (65,388/142,401) of households with children were overcrowded by the bedroom and space standards respectively compared with 4.7% (8,953/190,072) and 9.6% (18,229/190,072) without children. After adjusting for household ethnicity and housing tenure, households with children were more likely to be overcrowded (aOR [95% CI] 5.54 [5.40-5.68] and had 22.61m2 (95%CI: -22.75,-22.46) less space per person than those without children.

Conclusions: Up-to-date estimates of household overcrowding measured by bedroom and space standards can be derived from linked housing and health records. Our findings highlight the inequalities in overcrowding experienced by households with children and enable future work using linked data to evaluate impacts of overcrowding on children's health.

多元种族城市人口中有子女家庭过度拥挤的不平等现象:一项利用关联健康和住房记录进行的横断面研究。
导言:家庭过度拥挤是健康的一个重要决定因素,与儿童健康、教育和社会方面的不利结果有关。目的:我们的目的是通过匿名连接健康和财产数据,在考虑到城市、种族多样化和弱势伦敦人口的家庭种族和住房使用权后,确定有受抚养子女的家庭是否更有可能过度拥挤。方法:我们使用假名的唯一财产参考号码将电子健康记录与伦敦东北部的能源绩效证书财产数据联系起来,并确定了332,473个家庭,包括1,093,047人。我们的主要结果是基于卧室标准和空间标准(人均空间;m2)。我们检查了在调整家庭种族和权属之前和之后,家庭过度拥挤与家庭中儿童存在的关系。我们使用多变量逻辑回归来估计卧室标准过度拥挤的调整几率(aOR)和95%置信区间(CI),并使用线性回归来估计对人均空间的影响(95% CI)。结果:总体而言,42.8%(142,401/332,473)的家庭有儿童,54.5%的家庭是白人,58.4%的家庭住在私人或社会租赁的住房中。22.5%(32,075/142,401)和45.9%(65388 /142,401)有孩子的家庭在卧室和空间标准上分别过于拥挤,而没有孩子的家庭则为4.7%(8,953/190,072)和9.6%(18,229/190,072)。在调整了家庭种族和住房使用权后,有孩子的家庭更容易拥挤(aOR [95% CI] 5.54[5.40-5.68]),人均空间比没有孩子的家庭少22.61m2 (95%CI: -22.75,-22.46)。结论:通过卧室和空间标准衡量的家庭过度拥挤的最新估计可以从相关的住房和健康记录中得出。我们的研究结果突出了有孩子的家庭在过度拥挤方面的不平等,并使未来的工作能够使用相关数据来评估过度拥挤对儿童健康的影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
386
审稿时长
20 weeks
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