Tick icon
I am the notification bar, pleased to meet you.
Close close icon

Building Foundations for Healthy Housing

Matt Lowther, Head of Place and Equity at NHS Health Scotland, reflects on the Building Foundations for Health housing events that took place last autumn. 

Good housing is fundamental for our health and wellbeing. Housing has an important influence on health outcomes through the effects of quality, cost, fuel poverty and the role of housing in community life [1]. In Scotland, many people do not live in a home that is warm, dry and affordable, with people on low incomes being disproportionately affected. 

‘Healthy housing is shelter that supports a state of complete physical, mental and social well-being’[2], WHO Housing and Health Guidelines, 2018

By collaborating with housing colleagues, NHS Health Scotland is building foundations for healthy housing and striving to maximise housing’s contribution to improving health and reducing health inequalities. 

Last autumn, NHS Health Scotland hosted events in Aberdeen, Edinburgh and Kilmarnock, bringing together colleagues from local authorities, public health, health and social care, and other related disciplines. Over 150 delegates participated in this series of events, with the events focused on facilitating networking, sharing good practice and exploring local opportunities to further strengthen housing’s contribution to improving health and tackling inequalities. 

These events built on recommendations published in the Scottish Public Health Network (ScotPHN) report ‘Foundations for Wellbeing: Reconnecting Housing and Public Health’. The recommendations within this report sought to influence joint working between health and housing colleagues. 

Each event was chaired by a strategic lead for health or housing. Callum Chomczuk, National Director for the Chartered Institute of Housing in Scotland, chaired the Kilmarnock event. He said:

“The links between good health and good housing are well established, but we still need to work at bringing both sectors together. These events, hosted by NHS Health Scotland, have been incredibly useful in identifying common cause and how we can begin a new way of working.

“With an ageing population, and the pressure on our health service becoming more acute, housing is fundamental to improving public health. I hope this report and the good practice guide is useful to practitioners and, crucially, helps inform a strategic focus that puts housing at the heart of public health.”

NHS Health Scotland has published an events report, capturing findings from the group discussions at all three events. To accompany this report, case studies of local good practice examples presented throughout the events have also been published. These include inspiring examples of strategic collaboration or integration across health and housing to develop or deliver services to meet identified health or housing needs.   

Read the events report and case studies

The feedback and key themes which emerged from these events is informing NHS Health Scotland’s plans for 2019/20. These will ensure a continued focus on working in collaboration with local and national colleagues to embed health outcomes and health inequalities within housing strategy, policy and services. More details can be found within the event report.

If you are interested in our work, or would like to share your own, work please contact NHS Health Scotland’s Health Improvement Manager Katrina Reid.


[1] Housing and Health Inequalities, Inequalities Briefing, NHS Health Scotland, 2016

[2] WHO Housing and Health Guidelines, WHO, 2018

×
Url has been copied