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Local government interventions for improving the health and wellbeing of tenants in private rented housing: Developing initial program theory to inform evaluation in the United Kingdom

McClatchey, Rachael; Ferraro, Claire F.; Turner, Ellis; Harris, Jennifer; Banks, Jonathan

Local government interventions for improving the health and wellbeing of tenants in private rented housing: Developing initial program theory to inform evaluation in the United Kingdom Thumbnail


Authors

Claire F. Ferraro

Profile image of Ellis Turner

Ellis Turner Ellis.Turner@uwe.ac.uk
Senior Lecturer in Environmental Health

Jennifer Harris

Jonathan Banks



Abstract

Background: Housing is an important wider determinant of health. Private Rented Sector (PRS) housing is generally the worst quality of housing stock across tenures. Although a wide range of interventions are available to local governments to manage and improve the quality of PRS housing and therefore the health of tenants, there is limited evidence about the extent to which these are used. This study aims to explore what drives the use of different interventions in different local governments, to better understand and inform local strategies. Methods: As the first realist evaluation on this topic, the range of available interventions was informed by a Local Government Association toolkit. Consistent with realist approaches, retroductive analysis of intervention-context-mechanism-outcome configurations helped to develop and refine Initial Programme Theories (IPTs). Data sources included local government housing documents, a survey and eleven semi-structured interviews with housing officers. Results: Using data for 22 out of the 30 local governments in the South West region of the United Kingdom, eight IPTs were developed which act on different levels from individual PRS team leaders to system wide. The IPTs include a belief in market forces, risk adverse to legal challenge, attitude to enforcement, relational approaches to partnership working, job security and renumeration, financial incentives drive action, and system-level understanding of the drivers of poor health, inequalities and opportunities for cost-savings. The findings suggest that limited objective health outcomes are being used to understand impact, which hinders interpretation of the effectiveness of all mechanisms. Conclusion: Interventions that bring about positive outcomes in managing PRS housing are unlikely to be universal; they depend on the context which differs across place and over time. The proposed IPTs highlight the need for strategies to be tailored considering the local context and should be evaluated in subsequent phases of study.

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Jun 14, 2024
Online Publication Date Aug 7, 2024
Publication Date Aug 7, 2024
Deposit Date Aug 22, 2024
Publicly Available Date Aug 22, 2024
Journal BMC Public Health
Electronic ISSN 1471-2458
Publisher BioMed Central
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 24
Article Number 2144
DOI https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-024-19163-9
Keywords Realist evaluation, Private Rented Housing, Public health, Local Government, Causal mechanisms
Public URL https://uwe-repository.worktribe.com/output/12778977

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