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The latest briefing from the Race Equality Foundation is now available from
the Better Housing
website<http://www.better-housing.org.uk/briefings/housing-conditions-minority-ethnic-households-england>.
 Apologies for posting to multiple lists.

*The housing conditions of minority ethnic households in England*
Helen Garrett;   Justine Piddington;   Simon Nicol;
http://www.better-housing.org.uk/briefings/housing-conditions-minority-ethnic-households-england
This paper seeks to quantify the cost of poor housing among minority ethnic
households both to the NHS and wider society using analysis of data from
the English Housing Survey (EHS).  The message is a simple one; money
invested for improving poor housing among minority ethnic households could
have a significant impact in improving health and reducing the financial
burden on the NHS.


*Key messages*

   - In 2010, there were around 2.2 million households from minority ethnic
   backgrounds in England. Around 327,000 (15%) minority ethnic households
   lived in a home with at least one Category 1 HHSRS hazard (classified as
   poor housing in this paper). This varied according to tenure; 18% of
   minority ethnic private sector households lived with a serious health and
   safety hazard compared with 8% of those who lived in the public sector.
   - The estimated total annual treatment cost to the NHS is around £52
   million per year if the poor housing among minority ethnic households is
   left unimproved.
   - The wider costs to society of this poor housing are estimated at some
   2.5 times the NHS costs. These additional costs include: lack of
   educational attainment, lost income, higher insurance premiums, higher
   policing and emergency services costs, etc.
   - Case studies show that investing in the improvement of poor housing
   will not only make the lives of ethnic minority households more
   comfortable, it will pay back, often within a relatively short period, in
   saved treatments costs to the NHS for illnesses and injuries which are now
   statistically less likely to occur.

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Kat Clayton

Information Officer

Race Equality Foundation

42-50 Worsley St

Manchester

M15 4LD

Tel: 0161 220 1016



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http://www.raceequalityfoundation.org.uk



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