A ground-breaking new report by the UCL Institute of Health Equity (IHE) published today, Tuesday 17 December, highlights the profound impacts – both positive and negative – that housing has on health and wellbeing.
Building Health Equity: The Role of the Property Sector in Improving Health lays out how poor quality and inequitable access to homes that people can afford is linked with worse mental and physical health, whereas increased availability of secure, affordable, warm homes can improve long-term health and longevity.
The IHE’s report, which has been sponsored by Legal and General, proposes a new way forward to enable the property sector and national and local governments to put health, wellbeing, and environmental sustainability at the centre of how the UK builds and maintains homes, designs neighbourhoods, and fosters communities. This is crucial because:
National government, the review highlights, plays a crucial role in supporting planning, development and retrofit, and must prioritise affordable, healthy homes and places in its push to deliver 1.5 million homes in five years.
Property investors, developers, and operators also play a vital role through the quality, desirability, and sustainability of the homes they create and maintain, and through the support and facilities they offer to residents, communities, and local areas.
Building Health Equity focuses on how housing affects health in three ways: through quality, supply and affordability. It offers practical ways to address the UK’s dire need for good quality, affordable and accessible new houses to be built that meet local needs, and for existing homes to be retrofitted and refurbished.
The report also explores the benefits of protecting and enhancing biodiversity and providing access to community spaces and essential services. Health is best supported when people have access to a sufficient supply of affordable, good quality housing in places which support social cohesion, while protecting biodiversity and reducing greenhouse gas emissions.
Professor Sir Michael Marmot, UCL Institute of Health Equity Director, explained: “If nothing changes, the property sector will not deliver the affordable, good quality housing in the right places that this country so desperately needs. We know the largest volume house builders prioritise profit, but we need them to prioritise health equity as well, through the pace and quality of the homes and communities they deliver.
“Health and housing are integrally linked. If our homes do not provide security, safety, quality and belonging, good health is not possible. The twin housing and health crises bring an opportunity for new partnerships between government and the property sector to promote and sustain health equity.
“Solving the housing crisis is urgent, but it will take more than simply building high quantities of homes. It is crucial that property developers step up to play their role: supported by government grants, planning and regulation where required. Our new report lays out a new way forward and reinforces that preventing ill health and reducing inequalities can and must begin at home.”
The report builds on the Marmot Review for Industry , produced by the IHE in partnership with L&G . Since 2020, the IHE has been working with L&G to explore the role of business in promoting health equity and reducing health inequalities as investors, employers and providers of goods and services.
Pete Gladwell, Group Social Impact & Investment Director at Legal & General said: “As investors, developers, and operators, we are already seeing the positive impacts of integrating environmental considerations into business plans and strategies; the same effect can come about when we prioritise addressing inequalities in health. This is an opportunity for the property and housing sector to change millions of people’s lives for better by helping them to live healthier and longer.
“Equitable access to high-quality housing sits at the bedrock of this. This report underscores just how vital the property sector is in tackling health inequality, helping to lay the long-term foundations for a better future.”
As much as housing policy and legislation is specific to devolved nations, the review focuses mostly on England, where the lack of land supply makes the housing crisis particularly acute. The principles and recommendations, though, are applicable across the UK.
Key recommendations include:
Next steps
This report is the beginning of an ambitious agenda to ensure the homes built and the places and communities developed have equity of health, wellbeing and environmental sustainability at their core. Further work is needed to ensure the property sector, national and local governments and other stakeholders operationalise the recommendations.
Pilot projects are needed to demonstrate what is possible. These could be trialled in some of the more than 50 local authorities that have become Marmot Places . Best practice can then be shared across all partners via the Health Equity Network .