Abstract
The low impact of scientific research on the relations between housing and health during the last 30 years can be attributed to a number of reasons. First, statistical analyses have meant to improve understanding of the relations between what are interpreted and measured as causal factors. However, any single statistical approach fails to account for the dynamic non-linear relations between multiple factors and therefore cannot analyze systemic complexity. Second, there has been too little accumulation and validation of knowledge from scientific research owing to the dominance of cross-sectional studies, and the lack of coordinated research agendas using these approaches in order to confirm empirical findings. Hence, there is little evidence indicating that public policies in both the housing and the public health sectors in specific localities have benefited from the accumulated evidence of empirical research. Third, the findings from empirical studies have been published in academic journals and monographs but rarely disseminated to actors and institutions in the public and private sectors. Hence housing and health research and policy formulation have not been consolidated during the last three decades. The author of this communication argues for a radical shift from conventional disciplinary and multi-disciplinary contributions to transdisciplinary research programmes and projects that formulate and apply innovative approaches founded on conceptual frameworks that apply systems thinking for the integration of knowledge and know-how of researchers, policy makers, and professional practitioners in precise localities.
Highlights
During the last 30 years, numerous research projects, publications and conferences on housing and health have been achieved in many countries around the world
The World Health Organization Regional Office for Europe founded a taskforce on housing and health in 2002
One outcome has been a Large-Scale Pan-European Survey (LARES) of housing and health completed in eight European cities in 2003 [4]
Summary
During the last 30 years, numerous research projects, publications and conferences on housing and health have been achieved in many countries around the world. The delegates recommended that guidelines on “healthy housing” should be developed to promote preventive measures through better housing [5] All of these contributions share a common concern to improve our understanding of the multiple relations between diverse characteristics of housing environments that can positively or negatively influence physical and mental health, and the social wellbeing of individuals, households, and population groups. Despite these good intentions, the impact of empirical research and policy dialogue has not been effective in accumulating, validating and applying knowledge that could improve housing and health in all regions of the world. This communication argues that both housing and health are not just disciplinary subjects of professional expertise; they are fundamental societal challenges that require collective understanding and action
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