Housing Need Among Children with Medical Complexity: A Cross-Sectional Descriptive Study of Three Populations.

2021 
Abstract Objective Children with medical complexity (CMC) are hypothesized to have unique housing and accessibility needs due to their medical fragility and medical technology dependency, however research on prevalence and types of housing need in CMC is limited. The objective was to describe housing need in families of CMC, and to compare housing need across CMC, children with one chronic condition (Type 1 diabetes; CT1D) and healthy children (HC). Methods This cross-sectional descriptive study assessed housing suitability, adequacy, affordability, stress, stability, and accessibility using survey methodology. Participants were caregivers of CMC, CT1D and HC at a tertiary-care paediatric hospital. The association of housing need outcomes across groups was analyzed using logistic and ordinal logistic regression models, adjusting for income, educational attainment, employment status, community type, immigration status, child age, and number of people in household. Results 490 caregivers participated. Caregivers of CMC reported increased risk of housing-related safety concerns [aOR 3.1 (1.3-7.5)], using a common area as a sleeping area [5.6 (2.0-16.8)], reducing spending [4.6 (2.3-9.5)] or borrowing money to afford rent [2.9 (1.2-6.7)], experiencing housing stress [3.3 (1.8-6.0)], and moving or considering moving to access health/community services [15.0 (6.4-37.6)] compared to HC. Conclusions CMC were more likely to experience multiple indicators of housing need compared to CT1D and HC even after adjusting for sociodemographic factors, suggesting an association between complexity of child health conditions and housing need. Further research and practise should consider screening for and supporting housing need in CMC. What's New: In this study, caregivers of children with medical complexity were more likely to experience inadequate, unsuitable, unaffordable and stressful housing than families of healthy children and those with one chronic condition (Type 1 diabetes) even after adjusting for sociodemographic factors.
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