Boston University, Boston, MA, USA.
Soc Sci Med. 2010 Dec;71(12):2049-56. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2010.09.034. Epub 2010 Oct 13.
This study exploits an exogenous health shock-the birth of a child with a severe health condition that is considered by the medical community to be random-to investigate the effect of that shock on the family's housing situation. We use population-based data from an urban birth cohort study in the U.S. that oversampled non-marital births, resulting in a relatively disadvantaged sample that may be particularly susceptible to the effects of adverse life events. The health conditions were recorded in the infants' hospital medical records and coded by a pediatric consultant to capture conditions that are considered both severe and random. Seven different housing outcomes in the domains of quality, crowding, and stability were assessed from maternal interviews and in-home assessments when the children were 3 years old. We found that poor child health increases the likelihood of both overcrowding and homelessness and that it may also increase the likelihood of having inadequate utilities and generally poor housing quality. The effect sizes ranged from 1 to 17 percentage points, depending on the measure of poor child health and housing outcome.
本研究利用外生健康冲击——孩子出生时患有严重健康状况,而这种状况被医学界认为是随机的——来研究这种冲击对家庭住房状况的影响。我们使用了一项美国城市出生队列研究中的基于人群的数据,该研究对非婚姻生育进行了抽样,从而产生了一个相对处于不利地位的样本,该样本可能更容易受到不利生活事件的影响。健康状况在婴儿的医院病历中记录,并由儿科顾问进行编码,以捕捉被认为既严重又随机的状况。在孩子 3 岁时,通过母亲访谈和家访评估了在质量、拥挤和稳定性方面的七个不同的住房结果。我们发现,儿童健康状况较差会增加过度拥挤和无家可归的可能性,而且也可能增加缺乏基本设施和总体住房质量较差的可能性。影响大小因儿童健康和住房结果的衡量标准而异,范围从 1 到 17 个百分点。