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A Typology of Family Housing Insecurity: Impacts of Caregiver Depression and Substance Use

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Abstract

Housing insecurity is endemic among low-income families. Caregiver mental health is an important factor for predicting family housing risk, but less is known about how it impacts subtypes of housing insecurity. The present study investigates two research questions for a sample of families with adolescent children: (1) Do distinct subtypes of housing insecurity exist based on affordability and instability? (2) Does caregiver depression or substance misuse predict housing insecurity subtypes? Data came from a large sample of low-income families (N = 2955). Missing data were handled using multiple imputation with chained equations. Latent class analysis estimated housing subtypes and longitudinal predictors of class membership using mixture modeling. Results showed a three-class solution that suggested a continuum of risk was the best fit to the data. The majority of families (“Low Housing Risk” class; 82.9%) experienced low levels of housing insecurity, whereas one in six families “Cost-Burdened but Housed,” (14.5%) reported difficulty affording rent but maintained housing. The smallest, highest-risk class (“Housing Insecure,” 2.7%) reported recent doubling up, evictions, and/or homelessness. Caregiver substance use quadrupled the likelihood that families would fall into the smallest (“Housing Insecure”) class. Policies limiting access to housing assistance for households with a history of drug convictions may perpetuate ongoing risk for housing instability.

Highlights

  • Families with children experience a range of diverse housing problems that threaten well-being.

  • Latent class analysis indicated three subgroups of housing insecurity indicating a continuum of risk among families with adolescents.

  • Caregiver substance use quadrupled the likelihood that families would fall into the highest risk class.

  • Caregiver depression increased risk for experiencing housing cost burden.

  • Failure to address caregiver mental health threatens family housing stability.

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Correspondence to Katherine E. Marçal.

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The authors report no funding sources or conflicts of interest for the present study. The study used publicly available secondary data and was thus exempt from IRB review.

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Marçal, K.E., Fowler, P.J. & Barr, N. A Typology of Family Housing Insecurity: Impacts of Caregiver Depression and Substance Use. J Child Fam Stud 32, 3288–3298 (2023). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10826-023-02642-9

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10826-023-02642-9

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