‘Housing Policy Debate’ Publishes Penn Nursing & Cornell Study on Affordable Housing

Newswise — PHILADELPHIA (February 11, 2016) – Housing Policy Debate recently published a study on the effect micro-neighborhood conditions have on adult educational attainment in subsidized housing. University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing’s (Penn Nursing) Therese S. Richmond, PhD, FAAN, CRNP, the Andrea B. Laporte Professor of Nursing, and Associate Dean for Research and Innovation, served as the study’s senior author. The research team was led by former Penn Robert Wood Johnson Health & Society post-doctoral fellow, Laura Tach PhD, who is now an Assistant Professor at Cornell University College of Human Ecology.

The ACHIEVEability model of affordable housing aims to promote self-sufficiency by requiring enrollment in college as a component of their family self-sufficiency program. For this study, the researchers were interested in knowing if the location of subsidized housing had any impact on whether or not its residents were able to accrue educational credits.

The team researched a quasi-random assignment of 84 ACHIEVEability participants to their housing units. Investigators evaluated whether micro-neighborhood environments – the group of city blocks immediately surrounding housing units – affected participants’ progress in achieving college credits. The study found that participants did succeed in their educational pursuits in line with program requirements, earning about 12 college credits per year, but the characteristics of the neighborhood in which the subsidized housing was located did affect this progress.

The study concluded that participants who were assigned housing located in poorer, more violent, and less educated block groups earned credits at a significantly slower rate than participants assigned housing in more advantaged block groups.

“Our findings suggest that the ACHIEVEability model does work in helping to promote self-sufficiency,” said Richmond, the study’s senior author. “But the results suggest that the micro environments immediately surrounding residents of subsidized housing do matter. Making even modest improvements in the blocks on which affordable housing units are located could have a major impact on the pace at which residents make educational progress.”

This work was supported by Center for Public Health Initiatives at the University of Pennsylvania and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Health & Society Scholars Program. Research reported in this publication was supported by the National Institute of Nursing Research of the National Institutes of Health under award number F31NR0113599.

The study team also consisted of: Sara Jacoby, Center for Disease Control Foundation Fellow, Penn Injury Science Center; Douglas Wiebe, PhD, University of Pennsylvania, Department of Biostatistics & Epidemiology; and Terry Guerra, formerly Director of Special Projects at ACHIEVEability.

About the University of Pennsylvania School of NursingThe University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing is one of the world’s leading schools of nursing and is ranked the #1 graduate nursing school in the United States by U.S. News & World Report. Penn Nursing is consistently among the nation’s top recipients of nursing research funding from the National Institutes of Health. Penn Nursing prepares nurse scientists and nurse leaders to meet the health needs of a global society through research, education, and practice.