Litcius/Paper detail

Understanding the mental health impacts of poor quality private-rented housing during the UK's first COVID-19 lockdown

Dillon Newton, Michael Lucock, Rachel Armitage, Leanne Monchuk, Philip Brown

2022Health & Place27 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

This paper examines the mental health impacts of poor quality private-rented housing in the north of England during the UK's first COVID-19 lockdown. The paper draws on data collected from semi-structured telephone interviews with 40 renters in the private-rented sector. We use the Power Threat Meaning Framework to highlight how substandard housing was a social and material vulnerability which, underpinned by powerlessness, resulted in threats that created and exacerbated the mental-ill health of precarious private renters. The paper suggests the pandemic and increased time spent in unhealthy places of residence can create stresses at a time of broader structural fragility, and calls for the greater engagement and integration of health practitioners in the future development of housing policy at all levels.

Topics & Concepts

Mental healthResidenceCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)Vulnerability (computing)PandemicMeaning (existential)Quality (philosophy)2019-20 coronavirus outbreakSociologyEconomic growthBusinessPublic relationsPolitical sciencePsychologyMedicineEconomicsPsychiatryComputer securityDiseaseInfectious disease (medical specialty)OutbreakPathologyEpistemologyPhilosophyPsychotherapistVirologyComputer scienceDemographyHomelessness and Social IssuesHealth disparities and outcomesEmployment and Welfare Studies