Influence of Indoor Hygrothermal Conditions on Human Quality of Life in Social Housing

Modern societies spend most of their time indoors, namely at home, and the indoor environment quality turns out to be a crucial factor to health, quality of life and well-being of the residents. The present study aims to understand how indoor environment relates with quality of life and how improvin...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inJournal of public health research Vol. 4; no. 3; p. 589
Main Authors Soares, Sara, Fraga, Silvia, Delgado, Joao M P Q, Ramos, Nuno M M
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Italy PAGEPress Publications 17.11.2015
PAGEPress Publications, Pavia, Italy
SAGE Publishing
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Summary:Modern societies spend most of their time indoors, namely at home, and the indoor environment quality turns out to be a crucial factor to health, quality of life and well-being of the residents. The present study aims to understand how indoor environment relates with quality of life and how improving housing conditions impacts on individuals' health. This study case will rely on the following assessments in both rehabilitated and non-rehabilitated social housing: i) field measurements, in social dwellings (namely temperature, relative humidity, carbon dioxide concentration, air velocity, air change rate, level of mould spores and energy consumption); ii) residents' questionnaires on social, demogaphic, behavioural, health characteristics and quality of life. Also, iii) qualitative interviews performed with social housing residents from the rehabilitated houses, addressing the self-perception of living conditions and their influence in health status and quality of life. All the collected information will be combined and analysed in order to achieve the main objective. It is expected to define a Predicted Human Life Quality (PHLQ) index, that combines physical parameters describing the indoor environment measured through engineering techniques with residents' and neighbourhood quality of life characteristics assessed by health questionnaires. Improvement in social housing should be related with better health indicators and the new index might be an important tool contributing to enhance quality of life of the residents. Significance for public healthThis study will contribute to understand how indoor environment relates with quality of life and how improving housing conditions impacts on individuals' health, in social housing neighbourhoods. As so, it is important to share the undertaken methodology carried out by a multidisciplinary team, in order to allow other researchers following comparable studies to adopt a similar approach. The case study results will allow to define building rehabilitation policies, improving residents' quality of life and adding great contribution to public health promotion.
Bibliography:Conflict of interest: the authors have no conflicts of interest to disclose Funding: this work is supported by FEDER funding from the Operational Programme Factors of Competitiveness - COMPETE and by national funding from the FCT - Foundation for Science and Technology (Portuguese Ministry of Education and Science) within the project “Influence of Indoor Hygrothermal Conditions on Human Quality of Life in Social Housing” (ref. EXPL/ECM-COM/1999/2013-FCOMP-01-0124-FEDER-041748).
Ethics approval: Ethics Committee of Institute of Public Health of University of Porto (Proc. Approval number CE14018) and Portuguese Data Protection Authority (Proc. Approval number 4590/2015).
Contributions: NR and JD were responsible for the study design and technical aspects of field measurements; SF and SS drafted the questionnaires and qualitative aspects of the study protocol. SS was responsible for drafting this paper and all authors read, provided important revisions and approved the final version of the manuscript.
ISSN:2279-9028
2279-9036
2279-9036
DOI:10.4081/jphr.2015.589