What's equity got to do with health in a higher-density city?
- Written by Susan Thompson, Professor of Planning and Head, City Wellbeing Program, City Futures Research Centre, UNSW
This article is the last of a series of articles based on new research into the place of lower-income and disadvantaged households in a compact city.
More and more of us living in denser cities where apartments and high-rise developments are increasingly common. This creates specific health concerns for residents of these areas, and for lower-income households in particular.
We already know socioeconomic status is closely related to health and wellbeing. The importance of equity was highlighted in the 2016 Boyer Lectures. Entitled Fair Australia: Social Justice and the Health Gap, the lectures were delivered by a world leader in health inequality research, Professor Sir Michael Marmot.
Further reading: Social determinants – how class and wealth affect our health
Marmot examined the challenges for poor communities in achieving good health from early life to old age. His message focused on the social determinants of health. And the built environment, including its environmental context, is among the most important of these.
This is usefully presented in the below health map for human settlements.
Barton & Grant 2006How does the built environment affect health?
Many urban planners are working with health professionals to create a built environment that promotes good health for diverse populations. An ever-increasing body of research and practice evidence is available to support this work.
We know that the neighbourhoods where people live, together with their workplaces and the transport systems that link them, are fundamentally important for health and wellbeing.
We also recognise that the obstacles to health and wellbeing are greater for lower-income groups. For instance, those who live further from good city infrastructure and services, typically poorer communities, face greater challenges to stay healthy.
Residents of the outer suburbs tend to travel much longer distances between home, work and the services they need daily. Getting around necessarily defaults to the car, which has serious long-term implications for health. Driving is particularly associated with extended sitting in a confined space and, as a result, not getting enough exercise each day.
Long car-based commutes are also tiring and often stressful. Arriving home exhausted takes away from quality time with family and friends, as well as the energy needed to prepare nutritious meals. These are all negatives for maintaining good physical and mental health.
High-rise living and health
Denser cities are seen as the antidote to these problems – and with density comes high-rise and apartment living.
So, the question then is: how does a higher-density built environment affect our health?
The first thing to consider is the location of high-rise development. Siting high-rise residential blocks along busy and polluted roads is problematic for health.
Further reading: Transport access is good for new housing, but beware the pollution
When poorer communities are located in areas of lesser amenity due to lower housing costs, this exacerbates their health problems. While the initial cost of home ownership might be lower for the individuals, the longer-term impost on the health budget, associated with respiratory disease, needs to be factored into the equation.
Another critical concern is building design and construction. Poor design and building standards can mean adjoining apartment dwellers are affected by noise from their neighbours. This can result in sleep deprivation, stress, and anxiety (and in extreme cases, neighbour conflict and violence).
These are all risk factors for mental health problems, as well as being implicated in poor physical health. For example, sleep deprivation is linked to obesity, which is a risk factor for many chronic diseases.
It doesn’t stop there – ongoing building maintenance and management are crucial. A pristine development won’t remain that way if not well managed. For example:
security might well complicate easy access between floors and prevent stair use, which is a great way to get some incidental physical activity;
meeting rooms can be closed off for fear of noisy gatherings or messy community groups; and
garden spaces may be contracted out, denying residents the benefits of growing and harvesting their own food.
Green open space is good for us
There is no shortage of evidence to show just how important access to quality green open space is for health and wellbeing.
Different types of green space, easily accessible to everyone, no matter what their income, should be a priority in designing high-density residential areas.
Our recently released research explored how neighbourhoods support community health. Our findings offer insights into key elements of health-supportive environments:
free (or low-cost) infrastructure for activities such as walking and cycling is important, as are continued maintenance and safe and direct routes to nearby destinations;
affordable spaces that enable community-led social groups (sewing, cooking, men’s sheds) are critical in helping with social interaction, at little or no cost, to avoid isolation and loneliness;
all residents benefit from free, accessible, good-quality and well-maintained public spaces;
residents should have access to affordable, healthy local food outlets, and community food box programs are a key initiative for lower-income groups; and
implications of ageing and the use of public facilities need to be considered – our interviewees spoke of frailties that made it more difficult to be out and about, enjoying physical activity and being socially connected.
Study participants living in high-rise apartments were concerned about increasing residential density and loss of amenity. Issues they mentioned included access to sunlight/daylight, privacy and inter/overlooking, and dust and grit affecting their use of balconies.
A fair go for all?
This is a good question when it comes to the health and wellbeing of poor communities in high-rise housing.
All of the issues mentioned above are potentially challenging for maintaining wellbeing day-to-day. Many are not income-specific, but lower-income groups have less capacity to respond to these challenges.
High-density living is increasingly trumpeted as “healthy”. But without supportive infrastructure based on an understanding of specific geographic contexts and community needs, this way of living will pose significant health risks.
Blindly pursuing a uniform denser city agenda will only reinforce and exacerbate health inequalities.
You can read other articles in the series here.
Authors: Susan Thompson, Professor of Planning and Head, City Wellbeing Program, City Futures Research Centre, UNSW
Read more http://theconversation.com/whats-equity-got-to-do-with-health-in-a-higher-density-city-82071