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Housing, Race and Health Status Working Group

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Lawrence Heights C.H.C: Sherry Phillips, Erika Khandor. Background ... Where: northwest Toronto (off Caledonia Road south of Lawrence Avenue) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Housing, Race and Health Status Working Group


1
Housing, Race and Health Status Working
Group
  • Working Group Members
  • Access Alliance MCHC Mary Roufail, Hélène
    Grégoire, (Sam Dunn)
  • Toronto Community Housing Adriana Beemans,
    M.S. Mwarigha
  • York University Robert Murdie
  • Lawrence Heights C.H.C Sherry Phillips, Erika
    Khandor

2
Background
  • Racialised Groups and Health Status Exploring
    Poverty, Housing, Racism and Access to Health
    Care in Toronto
  • Research development initiative funded by the
    Canadian Institutes of Health Research and led by
    AAMCHC

3
Goals of the Project
  • Develop a long-term program of research (3-5
    years) to explore the impact of income, housing
    status, racism and access to health care on the
    health status of racialised groups in Toronto.
  • Work to increase the capacity of community
    organizations, academics and other stakeholders
    to work collaboratively to develop research
    proposals.

4
Racialisation
  • Racialisation refers to the process by which
    racial categories are constructed as different
    and unequal in ways that leads to social,
    economic and political impacts (Galabuzi 2001).

5
Racialised Groups
  • By racialised groups we refer to non-dominant
    ethnoracial communities who, through the process
    of racialisation, experience race as a key factor
    in their identity with the consequence of
    differential treatment in relation to the
    dominant culture group (i.e. white) (Galabuzi
    2001).

6
The Rationale for RGHS
  • In 1996, racialised communities accounted for 32
    of the population of the Census Metropolitan Area
    (CMA) and are now estimated to constitute over
    50 of Torontos population.
  • Racialised groups in Canada experience increasing
    levels of poverty, homelessness and inadequate
    housing, race-based discrimination, and barriers
    to health care.
  • ...yet we know little about how these
    socioeconomic factors impact the health of
    racialised communities in Toronto.

7
CBR
  • Community-based research projects are those that
    are driven by community needs and involve
    community and academic collaborations and place
    highest priority on action outcomes.
  • Wellesley Central Health Corporation,
    http//www.wellesleycentral.com

8
Why CBR?
  • To generate relevant, useful and valid knowledge
  • To make change happen
  • To build capacity and enable members of
    racialised communities to gain control over their
    health
  • To tap into different experiences, skills and
    knowledge

9
Structure
  • Four Working Groups comprised of service
    providers, community members and academics,
    identifying key research questions and developing
    CBR proposals on
  • Poverty, Racism and Health
  • Race-Based Discrimination and Mental Health
  • Race and Access to Health Care
  • Housing, Race and Health Status

10
Locating the Research
  • Identifying a community
  • Social housing community (Lawrence Heights) vs.
    private housing community (Lotherton Pathway)
  • Practical concerns
  • Timeframe, Resources needed,
  • Community entry point/Community connection
  • Ensuring mutual benefits
  • Lawrence Heights Community Health Centre is
    interested in bringing more services to area,
    already delivered some community programs,
    canvassed area to assess needs services, held
    community meetings

11
Lotherton Pathway
  • Where northwest Toronto (off Caledonia Road
    south of Lawrence Avenue)
  • What 744 condominium units contained in
    high-rise buildings and town-homes (Approx.
    two-thirds resident owners and one-third tenants)
  • Who approximately 3,000 people
  • Why little or no previous research and a large
    racial minority population (especially Guyanese
    and Vietnamese)

12
Preliminary Assumptions
  • Living in poor housing conditions leads to poor
    health
  • Racialised groups are often relegated to poor
    housing
  • Racialised groups have fewer options for mobility
    that can lead to better housing
  • Ownership vs. Rental significantly impacted on
    housing/health experience

13
Questions
  • Who defines what is poor housing?
  • What is meant by poor health?
  • What is meant by racialised groups?
  • What conditions lead individuals or groups to
    remain in poor housing, and what are the impacts
    on health?
  • If we fix housing, will it fix other things?

14
What Weve Done So FarThe Working Group
  • Conducted an extensive literature review on the
    intersections between housing and health
  • Obtained background demographic and property
    information about the Lotherton Pathway community
  • Conducted two focus groups to explore community
    health issues (English, Vietnamese)
  • Generated interest among community members to
    participate in the longer term research project

15
What Weve Learned So Far
  • Dissatisfaction with property maintenance
  • General satisfaction with overall safety but
    concern about property crime
  • Limited services within easy walking distance
  • Community issues include language barriers,
    ethno-cultural biases, inter-generational
    conflict, frustration regarding condominium
    services by both owners and renters
  • Environmental health concerns include limited
    waste management, pests, mould, sound pollution
  • Childrens satisfaction with area/school
    contribute to parents decision to remain in area
  • Relative low cost for renting/ownership
    contributes to residents decision to remain in
    area

16
Conclusion Next Steps
  • Follow up to community focus groups
  • Finalizing research questions
  • Proposal Development
  • Submission for Funding
  • Engaging community in research
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