Advocacy, Families, Health, Housing

Disaster damage to home impacts mental health

Written byChristine Tondorf
Published on09 Jun, 2023

Summary

Community service providers are fast learning how to deliver wrap-around supports to communities impacted by extreme weather events, but there’s a desperate need for more social and affordable housing in these areas. Homelessness services around Australia are stretched, but in northern NSW homelessness support services – like Social Futures Connecting Home program – are also dealing with people displaced by extreme weather events like floods and fires.

Social Futures CEO Tony Davies has told the 2023 National Housing and Homelessness Forum that community service providers are fast learning how to deliver wrap-around supports to communities impacted by extreme weather events, but there’s a desperate need for more social and affordable housing in these areas.

Homelessness services around Australia are stretched, but in northern NSW homelessness support services – like Social Futures Connecting Home program – are also dealing with people displaced by climate-change disasters like floods and fires.

New research recently has found Australians whose homes have been damaged or destroyed in climate-related disasters such as floods, cyclones or bushfires suffer significant health and housing impacts.

In a study, published in The Lancet Planetary Health, University of Melbourne researchers looked at population-based data to track the health and housing outcomes and recoveries of 1,984 Australians whose homes were impacted by climate-related disasters in the years between 2009-2019.

The study found people who were exposed to disaster-related damage to their homes were impacted in terms of their mental health, social functioning and emotional wellbeing – while also reporting significantly lower levels of general health – and that these impacts often lasted years.

Research fellow Dr Ang Li from the NHMRC Centre of Research Excellence in Healthy Housing in the Centre for Health Policy (School of Population and Global Health) led the research, and said that extreme climate events have become more frequent and severe in Australia, destroying people’s homes and often destabilising their lives.

“These events can cause huge upheaval in a person’s life,” Dr Li said.

“We found exposure to home damage from such events had significant negative effects on people’s health and wellbeing at the disaster year and continued to have a lasting impact for at least 1-2 years after the event.”

Dr Li said it shows the need to consider housing as prevention and intervention, to protect people’s health and wellbeing as Australia continues to grapple with climate-related disasters.

“Climate-related disasters are happening more often, creating an urgent need to research and develop preventative measures,” Dr Li said.

“Exposure to home damage from climate-related disasters had significant negative effects on people’s health and wellbeing.

These effects were also worse for people who had housing affordability stress or were living in poor quality housing before the disaster.”

Dr Li said that patterns of housing recovery were different for renters and owners.

“We found homeowners had increased housing affordability stress that could last for a couple of years after the disaster, while renters had a higher prevalence of acute residential instability,” Dr Li said.

“Our findings support the need for recovery planning and resilience building to consider housing affordability, tenure security, and housing condition.”

Dr Li said people who had pre-existing physical and mental health conditions also suffered more substantially.