2008
DOI: 10.1136/jech.2007.060103
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Residential mobility in childhood and health outcomes: a systematic review

Abstract: Residential mobility interacts at neighbourhood, family and individual levels in cumulative and compounding ways with significance for the wellbeing of children. High frequency residential change is potentially a useful marker for the clinical risk of behavioural and emotional problems. The evidence supports the reorientation of health services effectively to engage these residentially mobile children for whom health and psychological needs may be identified. The impact of housing and economic policies on chil… Show more

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Cited by 338 publications
(292 citation statements)
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“…Residential mobility, particularly amongst those concentrated in more deprived areas, may disrupt 491 access to preventative healthcare services (see Warfa et al, 2006;Jelleyman and Spencer, 2008). or perceived ability to access services) and participation in in health promotion activities (Zanchetta 499 and Poureslami, 2006).…”
Section: Groups 418mentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Residential mobility, particularly amongst those concentrated in more deprived areas, may disrupt 491 access to preventative healthcare services (see Warfa et al, 2006;Jelleyman and Spencer, 2008). or perceived ability to access services) and participation in in health promotion activities (Zanchetta 499 and Poureslami, 2006).…”
Section: Groups 418mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…58 XXXX found residential mobility to be an important determinant of CVD in Auckland, NZ. Residential 59 mobility has important implications for health (Morris et al, 2016), and has been examined in NZ in 60 the context of child health outcomes (Jelleyman and Spencer, 2008), but also more generally in 61…”
Section: Introduction 20mentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Unstable housing in childhood has been associated with poor adult health. 65,66 For first-generation homeowners, the physical and mental health of their social networks may be strained when foreclosure occurs, as the more resourced person (the homeowner) is under more stress and thus less able to provide support. 63 African American populations feel the impacts in health that result from widening existing inequalities in the social determinants of health such as income, asset and intergenerational wealth accumulation, and access to higher education.…”
Section: Implications Of Displacement For African American Communitiementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Children who stay in the same home have better behavioral and emotional health and educational achievement than their more mobile counterparts (Jelleyman and Spencer 2008;Leventhal and Newman 2010;Ziol-Guest and McKenna 2014). The mechanisms behind these associations include changes in social relationships such as friendship networks (South and Haynie 2004) and disruptions in institutional supports such as health insurance or medical facilities (Busacker and Kasehagen 2012).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%