Lessons from a rural housing crisis: grounded insights for intersectoral action on health inequities

Soc Sci Med. 2021 Feb:270:113416. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2020.113416. Epub 2020 Oct 3.

Abstract

Local communities are struggling with persistent health inequities driven by income disparity, housing inadequacy, and other intersecting factors that constrain individual and community well-being. Increasingly, intersectoral approaches are recognized as essential to tackle such challenges, given their intersecting nature. This paper describes Equity-focused Intersectoral Practice (EquIP), a novel methodology that merges participatory research principles with the purposeful positioning of grounded expertise (lived experience) to shift the gaze of intersectoral actors towards the contextual factors that contribute to health inequities. The EquIP methodology creates uncommon spaces for intersectoral encounter that support critical reflexivity and relationship-building among institutional and community-based intersectoral actors. A case example of the EquIP methodology, implemented in a small, rural Canadian city in the context of a regional housing crisis, illustrates how investment in reflexivity and relational praxis among diverse intersectoral actors supports the identification of existing structures, beliefs, and practices within institutional settings that constrain effective intersectoral response to health inequities.

Keywords: Canada; Health equity; Housing; Intersectoral action; Knowledge translation; Lived experience; Participatory action research; Social determinants of health.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Canada
  • Cities
  • Housing*
  • Humans
  • Income*