glasgow community health and well-being research and learning programme:

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GoWell is a collaborative partnership between the Glasgow Centre for Population Health, the University of Glasgow and the MRC Social and Public Health Sciences Unit, sponsored by Glasgow Housing Association, the Scottish Government, NHS Health Scotland and NHS Greater Glasgow & Clyde. Glasgow Community Health and Well-being Research and Learning Programme: Investigating the Processes and Impacts of Neighbourhood Change

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Page 1: Glasgow Community Health and Well-being  Research and Learning Programme:

GoWell is a collaborative partnership between the Glasgow Centre for Population Health, the University of Glasgow and the MRC Social and

Public Health Sciences Unit, sponsored by Glasgow Housing Association, the Scottish Government, NHS Health Scotland and NHS

Greater Glasgow & Clyde.

Glasgow Community Health and Well-being Research and Learning Programme:

Investigating the Processes and Impacts of Neighbourhood Change

Page 2: Glasgow Community Health and Well-being  Research and Learning Programme:

Residential Environments and Mental Wellbeing in Deprived Areas

Ade Kearns & Phil MasonUniversity of Glasgow

Page 3: Glasgow Community Health and Well-being  Research and Learning Programme:

What is GoWell?

Page 4: Glasgow Community Health and Well-being  Research and Learning Programme:

GoWell Aims• To investigate the health and wellbeing impacts

of housing investment & regeneration.• To understand the processes of change and

implementation which contribute to those health impacts (+ve and –ve).

• To contribute to community awareness and understanding, so that residents are better able to engage.

• To share best practice and knowledge with policy-makers and practitioners.

Page 5: Glasgow Community Health and Well-being  Research and Learning Programme:

Research objectives• To investigate how regeneration affects

individual and community health and wellbeing.• To assess the degree to which places are

transformed.• To understand processes that support cohesive,

sustainable communities.• To monitor the effects of regeneration policy on

area-based inequalities.• To develop and test research methods.

Page 6: Glasgow Community Health and Well-being  Research and Learning Programme:

Transformational Regen

Local Regeneration

Housing Improvement

GoWell Study Areas

Peripheral Estates

Areas surrounding MSFs

Page 7: Glasgow Community Health and Well-being  Research and Learning Programme:

Areas with >70% high-rise dwellings

GoWell Study Areas

Areas with >90% houses, low-rise flats and tenements

Red Road MS flats and surrounding area

Riddrie Carnty

ne

Sighthill

Townhead

Drumchapel

Shawbridge

Scotstoun MS flats and surrounding area

Gorbals Riverside

St Andrew’s Drive

Castlemilk

Govan

Birness Drive

Page 8: Glasgow Community Health and Well-being  Research and Learning Programme:

Income deprivationIncome deprivation by Gowell areasSource: Derived from DWP and SIMD data

24.627.1 28.6 29.0 29.1

34.8

38.8 39.942.1 42.1 43.2

50.052.2

54.1

0.0

10.0

20.0

30.0

40.0

50.0

60.0

Scotst

oun C

ore Flat

s

Riddrie

Red R

oad S

urrou

nd

Scotst

oun S

urrou

nding

Area

Carntyn

e

Sighthi

ll

Core A

rea

Castle

milk

Gorbals

Rive

rside

Govan

Drumch

apel

Townh

ead M

sfs

Shawbri

dge

St And

rews D

rive

% to

tal p

opul

atio

n cl

asse

d as

inco

me

depr

ived

10th (highest)

9

8

7

6

Income deprivation by Gowell areasSource: Derived from DWP and SIMD data

24.627.1 28.6 29.0 29.1

34.8

38.8 39.942.1 42.1 43.2

50.052.2

54.1

0.0

10.0

20.0

30.0

40.0

50.0

60.0

Scotst

oun C

ore Flat

s

Riddrie

Red R

oad S

urrou

nd

Scotst

oun S

urrou

nding

Area

Carntyn

e

Sighthi

ll

Core A

rea

Castle

milk

Gorbals

Rive

rside

Govan

Drumch

apel

Townh

ead M

sfs

Shawbri

dge

St And

rews D

rive

% to

tal p

opul

atio

n cl

asse

d as

inco

me

depr

ived

Scottish 15% most deprived cut-off

Income deprivation by Gowell areasSource: Derived from DWP and SIMD data

24.627.1 28.6 29.0 29.1

34.8

38.8 39.942.1 42.1 43.2

50.052.2

54.1

0.0

10.0

20.0

30.0

40.0

50.0

60.0

Scotst

oun C

ore Flat

s

Riddrie

Red R

oad S

urrou

nd

Scotst

oun S

urrou

nding

Area

Carntyn

e

Sighthi

ll

Core A

rea

Castle

milk

Gorbals

Rive

rside

Govan

Drumch

apel

Townh

ead M

sfs

Shawbri

dge

St And

rews D

rive

% to

tal p

opul

atio

n cl

asse

d as

inco

me

depr

ived

Scottish 5% most deprived cut-off

Scottish 10% most deprived cut-off

Scottish 15% most deprived cut-off

Page 9: Glasgow Community Health and Well-being  Research and Learning Programme:

Regeneration& ResidentialChange

Residential & Cultural Capital

Economic Capital

Community & Neighbourhood Context

Physical Health

Mental Health & Wellbeing

Social Health

Fixed Capital

Environmental Capital

Social & Community Capital

Human & Political Capital

Page 10: Glasgow Community Health and Well-being  Research and Learning Programme:

Wave 2 Survey 2008

• 4,657 respondents• 3,911 British citizens, i.e. excluding

Asylum Seekers and Refugees.– 1,662 males (43%)– 2,249 females (57%)– We confined this analysis to British citizens in

order to remove any effects of recent stress or trauma, or of differences in cultural understanding.

Page 11: Glasgow Community Health and Well-being  Research and Learning Programme:

Tenure of Respondents, 2008

• 70% are GHA tenants.• 11% are other renters (e.g. housing

associations).• 17% are owner occupiers.• 2% are in temporary situations.

Page 12: Glasgow Community Health and Well-being  Research and Learning Programme:

Mental Wellbeing

Page 13: Glasgow Community Health and Well-being  Research and Learning Programme:

Mental Wellbeing

• Different to mental illness.• Consists of two dimensions:• Hedonic wellbeing:

– Subjective experience of happiness and life satisfaction.

• Eudamonic wellbeing:– Positive psychological functioning, good

relationships with others, and self-realisation.

Page 14: Glasgow Community Health and Well-being  Research and Learning Programme:

What has Regeneration Got to do with Mental Wellbeing?

• Regeneration acts directly upon aspects of the residential context which are associated with mental health, such as:– Built form of dwellings (e.g. removal of high rise; attractiveness

of design).– Quality of the neighbourhood environment, including cleanliness,

safety, greenery.– Local amenities & services: which provide opportunities for

activity and interaction; and may affect perceptions of inclusion/exclusion (see next point)

• Regeneration also has indirect impacts upon aspects of the neighbourhood and community which can be supportive of mental health and of how people perceive themselves and their lives:– Social composition & social networks within an area– The reputation and status of an area.– People’s feeling of being included within, and cared for by,

society.

Page 15: Glasgow Community Health and Well-being  Research and Learning Programme:

• The regeneration process itself can impact upon mental wellbeing:– It can result in both personal and social disruption,

and cause uncertainty, e.g. about where people might live temporarily, how long change might take, who your future neighbours will be.

– Processes of information, consultation and engagement can potentially be empowering and confidence-building, or be frustrating and disempowering.

Page 16: Glasgow Community Health and Well-being  Research and Learning Programme:

WEMWBS Scale• The Warwick-Edinburgh Mental Wellbeing Scale

for the UK, developed with NHS Health Scotland.

• Consists of 14 items covering things such as confidence, optimism, happiness, clear thinking, closeness to others etc.

• Closely correlated with other emotional and psychological scales.

• Being used in the Scottish Health Survey and the Scottish Prison Survey.

Page 17: Glasgow Community Health and Well-being  Research and Learning Programme:

Scoring• Respondents are asked to assess how they

have been feeling over the past two weeks.• People can say, for each item, that they have

‘never’ felt positive up to feeling positive ‘All of the time’.

• The items are combined into a score that ranges from 14 to 70.

• In 2006, the mean scores for the Scottish population were found to be 51.3 (or 66.6%) for men and 50.3 (64.8%) for women.

Page 18: Glasgow Community Health and Well-being  Research and Learning Programme:

Includes 3,911 respondents in 15 study areas.Excluding asylum seekers and refugees.Mean scores : men= 51.12; women = 50.56 [very similar to national norms]Combined: mean = 50.80; standard deviation = 9.86

GoWell Wave 2 2008, WEMWBS Scores by Gender

Page 19: Glasgow Community Health and Well-being  Research and Learning Programme:

Housing

Page 20: Glasgow Community Health and Well-being  Research and Learning Programme:

Environmental Capital: Housing• Providing houses with gardens could

contribute to mental wellbeing, but even more important appears to be the provision of good maintenance and other services.

• Residents of houses have higher mental wellbeing than residents of flats.

• High-rise occupants have a lower mental wellbeing average score than occupants of all other types of flats.

• But housing conditions and housing services appear to have a stronger relationship with mental wellbeing than dwelling type…

Page 21: Glasgow Community Health and Well-being  Research and Learning Programme:

• Respondents measured housing conditions across 19 items on five-point scales, e.g. dampness, space, heating, repair, security etc..

• Landlord/factor’s housing services was assessed on a single five point scale.

• Those people rating housing conditions the best (top quartile) and housing services the best (very satisfied) both recorded mental wellbeing scores around 13% higher than people giving the worst ratings to these items.

• This is reflected in the relationship between mental wellbeing & housing satisfaction…

Page 22: Glasgow Community Health and Well-being  Research and Learning Programme:
Page 23: Glasgow Community Health and Well-being  Research and Learning Programme:

Housing & Mental Wellbeing

Range Change in Mean

WEMWBS Score

As % of a Standard Deviation

Dwelling Type High Rise - House

+3.82 +38.7%

Housing Tenure Social Rented - Owned

+4.39 +44.5%

Housing Conditions 1st-4th Quartile +7.10 +72.0%

Landlord/Factor Services

Dissatisfied – Very Satisfied

+7.80 +79.1%

Page 24: Glasgow Community Health and Well-being  Research and Learning Programme:

Neighbourhood

Page 25: Glasgow Community Health and Well-being  Research and Learning Programme:

Environmental & Fixed Capital: Neighbourhood

• Safety is the key important characteristic of the neighbourhood, but the appearance of the area may partly underpin this. Neighbourhood management and maintenance form an important combination.

• The prevalence of anti-social behaviour locally was assessed using an 11 item scale. It was not as strongly associated with mental wellbeing as feelings of safety:– People who say they feel ‘very safe’ walking alone after dark have

mental wellbeing scores on average 12% higher than those who feel ‘very unsafe’ and 14% higher than those who say they ‘never walk alone after dark’.

Page 26: Glasgow Community Health and Well-being  Research and Learning Programme:
Page 27: Glasgow Community Health and Well-being  Research and Learning Programme:

• Respondents assessed their local neighbourhood environment according to its attractiveness (of buildings and environment) and its peace & quiet.

• Local fixed capital was assessed by 9 items relating to different amenities and services (e.g. shops; community venues; play areas).

• Both had a positive relationship with mental wellbeing, but the environment more strongly so.

Page 28: Glasgow Community Health and Well-being  Research and Learning Programme:
Page 29: Glasgow Community Health and Well-being  Research and Learning Programme:

Neighbourhood & Mental Wellbeing

Range Change in Mean

WEMWBS Score

As % of a Standard Deviation

Antisocial Behaviour Problems

4th-1st Quartile +2.93 +29.7%

Local Services and Amenities

1st-4th Quartile +5.55 +56.3%

Environmental Quality 1st-4th Quartile +6.93 +70.3%

Safety After Dark Never walk alone – Very safe

+7.74 +78.5%

Page 30: Glasgow Community Health and Well-being  Research and Learning Programme:

Community

Page 31: Glasgow Community Health and Well-being  Research and Learning Programme:

Social & Community Capital• Local social capital is positively related to mental

wellbeing. Community interaction, and activities that make people feel they belong may be important for mental wellbeing.

• We asked about people’s sense of belonging to the neighbourhood, feeling part of the community, and enjoyment of living in the area.

• We also asked about interactions with neighbours: knowing them; talking to them; visiting them; exchanging things with them.

• Both of these dimensions of social capital, when summarised in scales, were associated with mental wellbeing, but sense of community more so.

Page 32: Glasgow Community Health and Well-being  Research and Learning Programme:
Page 33: Glasgow Community Health and Well-being  Research and Learning Programme:

Community & Mental Wellbeing

Range Change in Mean

WEMWBS Score

As % of a Standard Deviation

Sense of Community 1st – 4th Quartile +7.42 +75.3%

Neighbourliness 1st – 4th Quartile +5.51 +55.9%

Page 34: Glasgow Community Health and Well-being  Research and Learning Programme:

Empowerment

Page 35: Glasgow Community Health and Well-being  Research and Learning Programme:

Human Capital: Housing Empowerment

• Providing services in ways which help people feel empowered is important to their human capital and mental wellbeing.

• People who feel they are kept informed about things by their landlord or factor, and people who think that their landlord or factor takes account of residents’ views when making decisions, report more positive mental wellbeing than people who do not feel this way.

• The least empowered had a mean score of 46.6 and the most empowered a mean score of 53.4, some 12% higher on the scale.

Page 36: Glasgow Community Health and Well-being  Research and Learning Programme:

Human Capital: Local Empowerment

• Feeling empowered locally is strongly associated with mental wellbeing.

• We asked people three questions about local empowerment:– Could they influence decisions affecting their local area, on their own

or with others;– Were people in the area able to find ways to improve things in they

want;– Were the council and local service providers responsive to people’s

views.• We created a local empowerment score from all three

answers.• This showed a linear relationship with mental wellbeing

scores, with a range of 10 points or 18%.

Page 37: Glasgow Community Health and Well-being  Research and Learning Programme:
Page 38: Glasgow Community Health and Well-being  Research and Learning Programme:

Empowerment in Regeneration• Community Engagement may support positive mental

health in areas where mental wellbeing is relatively low.

• Mental wellbeing was lower in Transformation Areas and Local Regeneration Areas than elsewhere.

• Within these areas, mental wellbeing was higher among those people who…– Felt they were kept well informed about proposals for

redevelopment of the area (+8%)– Felt they had opportunities to have a say in the regeneration

(+10%).• Sense of empowerment is low in regeneration areas:

around a third of people in Transformation Areas feel they can influence decisions affecting their local area compared with nearly 60% of people living in the surrounding areas.

Page 39: Glasgow Community Health and Well-being  Research and Learning Programme:

Empowerment & Mental WellbeingRange Change in

Mean WEMWBS

Score

As % of a Standard Deviation

Kept informed about regeneration proposals

Not well – Fairly/Very Well

+4.48 +45.4%

Opportunities to have a say in regeneration

None/not enough - Plenty

+5.50 +55.8%

Landlord willing to take account of residents views

Dissatisfied – Very Satisfied

+6.70 +68.0%

Kept informed by landlord / factor

Dissatisfied – Very Satisfied

+6.96 +70.6%

Local Empowerment 1st-4th Quartile +10.24 +103.9%

Page 40: Glasgow Community Health and Well-being  Research and Learning Programme:

Perceived Influence

0.00

10.00

20.00

30.00

40.00

50.00

60.00

70.00

MTA LRA WSA HIA PE

Percentage ('Strongly Agree' or 'Agree')

20062008

“On your own, or with others, you can influence decisions affecting your local area.”

Page 41: Glasgow Community Health and Well-being  Research and Learning Programme:

Psychosocial Benefits of Neighbourhood

Page 42: Glasgow Community Health and Well-being  Research and Learning Programme:

Residential Capital: Reputations• Change in an area’s situation matters

more than its relative position at a point in time. Progress is important.

• People who thought that their area had got better to live in over the past two years and/or who thought that the area’s reputation within the city had got better, reported mental wellbeing scores 8% higher than people who thought the area itself, or its reputation, had got worse.

Page 43: Glasgow Community Health and Well-being  Research and Learning Programme:

But the internal reputation of an area may matter slightly more than its external, relative position.

• Residents who were strongly of the view that local people thought highly of the area had mental wellbeing scores 10% higher than those people who thought the opposite.

• What people you meet everyday think could be more important to your state of mind than what outsiders think.

Page 44: Glasgow Community Health and Well-being  Research and Learning Programme:

Sense of Progress• Where you live is a barometer of how well you

are doing in life. Feeling good about your area contributes to feeling good about yourself, and this supports mental wellbeing.

• Mental wellbeing scores were strongly associated with whether or not people thought that ‘Living in this neighbourhood makes me feel that I’m doing well in life’, ranging by 19% across the responses to this statement.

• This may be something to do with whether an area fits with one’s own personality, values and sense of one’s future trajectory.

Page 45: Glasgow Community Health and Well-being  Research and Learning Programme:
Page 46: Glasgow Community Health and Well-being  Research and Learning Programme:

• The fact that regeneration is a physical, psychological and a social challenge is brought home by the following findings:– In Housing Improvement Areas (like Riddrie) and in

the areas surrounding high rise estates (like Scotstoun), 7 out of 10 people (72%) can say that where they live helps make them feel they are doing well in life.

– In Transformation Areas it is half this number (36%).– Three times as many people in Transformation Areas

(36%) disagree with this statement compared with people in Housing Improvement Areas.

Page 47: Glasgow Community Health and Well-being  Research and Learning Programme:

Neighbourhood Change & Mental Wellbeing

Range Change in Mean

WEMWBS Score

As % of a Standard Deviation

Bad External Reputation Strongly Agree – Strongly Disagree

+1.70 +17.2%

Better or Worse to Live in Over Past Two Years

Worse - Better +4.27 +43.3%

Change in External Reputation Over Two Yrs

Worse - Better +4.72 +47.9%

Good Internal Reputation Strongly Disagree – Strongly Agree

+5.54 +56.2%

Nhd Makes Me Feel I am Doing Well in Life

Strongly Disagree – Strongly Agree

+10.72 +108.7%

Page 48: Glasgow Community Health and Well-being  Research and Learning Programme:

Conclusions• There are grounds for considering that

regeneration can impact upon mental wellbeing. – The quality of housing and of neighbourhood

environments are important.– But so too is the quality and effectiveness of

housing services and other local services– Even more important may be how well people

are treated as customers and the degree to which they feel empowered in relation to services & processes of area improvement.

Page 49: Glasgow Community Health and Well-being  Research and Learning Programme:

• Neighbourhoods also have to ‘fit’ with people’s identities, values and aspirations so that residence in an area delivers to people a sense of personal progress.

• Our further work will involve:– Subjecting these initial findings to greater

scrutiny through multivariate analysis.– Tracking mental wellbeing scores over time as

the interventions unfold.