Photo elicitation to explore health and social exclusion with rooming house residents in Ottawa, Canada

Little is known about how rooming house residents perceive how housing influences their health, despite higher morbidity and premature death compared to other Canadians. The social exclusion framework of the Social Knowledge Exchange Network (SEKN) conceptualized by Popay et al. (2008) was used to i...

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Veröffentlicht in:Health & place 2022-09, Vol.77, p.102866-102866, Article 102866
Hauptverfasser: Binch, Joanna, Backman, Chantal, Dej, Erin, Leonard, Lynne, Phillips, J. Craig
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Little is known about how rooming house residents perceive how housing influences their health, despite higher morbidity and premature death compared to other Canadians. The social exclusion framework of the Social Knowledge Exchange Network (SEKN) conceptualized by Popay et al. (2008) was used to investigate how rooming houses are linked to health among ten rooming house residents from six rooming houses in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada. Study activities included taking photos to show how living in a rooming house affects health, a community walk-about with the principal investigator, a focus group, and individual interviews. Thematic analysis revealed two broad themes: Housing is Health Care, and Just Managing Today. Findings suggest that structural inequalities and siloed care contribute to the health of rooming house residents, including the balance between poverty and desire to maintain housing, and how residents cope with this stress. If health care providers want to help alleviate the disparities in rooming house residents' health, they need to broaden the lens through which health is conceptualized. •A social exclusion framework was used to explore rooming house residents' perception of their health.•Photo elicitation methods included data from field notes, photos telephone interviews, and focus groups.•The rooming house environment can be considered a form of health care.•Residents of rooming houses live with considerable stress when the alternative housing option is homelessness.
ISSN:1353-8292
1873-2054
DOI:10.1016/j.healthplace.2022.102866