Journal Article

Housing at the intersection of health and climate change

Li, A., M. Toll, R. Chapman, P. Howden-Chapman, D. Hernández and H. Samuelson (2025)
The Lancet - Public Health, 10(10), e865-e873 (10.1016/ S2468-2667(25)00141-0)

Abstract / Summary:

Summary

Anthropogenic climate change is causing rapid shifts in temperature and weather patterns, both in location and intensity, making living conditions increasingly hazardous. This complicates housing's frontline role in protecting human health. When housing systems fail to provide universal access to secure, affordable, and suitable housing, social and health inequalities related to climate change are amplified. The location, construction, and operation of homes influence greenhouse gas emissions and must be improved to reduce their environmental impacts. This paper, the second in a Series on housing as a social determinant of health, builds a framework for conceptualising the interactions between housing, climate, and health. It identifies the pathways through which climate change affects housing and exacerbates health risks, and reflects on policy responses for climate resilience in housing and health.

This is the second in a Series of two papers about housing as a determinant of health

Citation:

Li, A., M. Toll, R. Chapman, P. Howden-Chapman, D. Hernández and H. Samuelson (2025): Housing at the intersection of health and climate change. The Lancet - Public Health, 10(10), e865-e873 (10.1016/ S2468-2667(25)00141-0) (https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lanpub/article/PIIS2468-2667(25)00141-0/fulltext)