Housing and Health: Beyond Disciplinary Confinement
- 3 May 2006
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Journal of Urban Health
- Vol. 83 (3) , 540-549
- https://doi.org/10.1007/s11524-006-9055-4
Abstract
There is a need for innovative research on housing and health. In contrast to traditional disciplinary studies, which are sector-based, interdisciplinary and transdisciplinary contributions offer a broader approach. Interdisciplinary approaches highlight the difference between a biomedical model that often adopts a symptom-treatment interpretation of housing and health and a holistic or integrated model that combines biological, cultural, economic, political, psychological and social factors in a new way. This article illustrates the pertinence of interdisciplinary contributions to develop a more holistic understanding of housing density and how it can be interpreted to understand the complex relationship between housing conditions and health status.Keywords
This publication has 21 references indexed in Scilit:
- Futures of protracted conflictsFutures, 2004
- Futures of TransdisciplinarityFutures, 2004
- The Housing/Health Relationship: What Do We Know?Reviews on Environmental Health, 2000
- Urban Health: A New Agenda?Reviews on Environmental Health, 2000
- Social Determinants of HealthJournal of Public Health Policy, 2000
- Crossing Boundaries: Knowledge, Disciplinarities, and InterdisciplinaritiesHistory of Education Quarterly, 1998
- An Essay on the Principle of Population: Text Sources and Background Criticism.Contemporary Sociology: A Journal of Reviews, 1977
- The Experience of Crowding in Primary and Secondary EnvironmentsEnvironment and Behavior, 1976
- On the distinction between density and crowding: Some implications for future research.Psychological Review, 1972
- History of Public HealthScience, 1959