Tenants with health issues could be the key to identifying dangerous building conditions in New York City long before someone calls 311 to report mold or heat outages, according to a new report from researchers at NYU.
The report, published this month in the journal Health Affairs, says cities like New York can use health data from people living at the same address to spot systemic problems within buildings.
The researchers examined health insurance claims from tenants living in buildings listed on the New York City public advocateโs annual โLandlord Watchlistโ to measure how poor housing conditions worsen breathing problems, heart ailments and even mental illness. They also created a โhousing health indexโ using Medicaid data from people living at 22,500 buildings in the five boroughs to predict where living conditions were the most hazardous.
The study comes as conditions deteriorate in many residential buildings across the city, especially in apartments housing low-income New Yorkers. New Yorkโs recently released Housing and Vacancy Survey shows leaks, holes, peeling paint and rodent infestations are all on the rise across the five boroughs.
NYU associate professor Daniel Neill, one of the reportโs authors, said housing agencies can use the same method to identify unsafe buildings.
โIf they see that there’s already a spike in asthma at that building, then they could be looking for potential violations and hazards that might actually be impacting air quality,โ he said.
Neill said New York City housing officials typically inspect apartment buildings in response to complaints, including 311 calls, but could also use aggregate health data to identify potential problems and intervene to get systemic issues fixed.
โThere’s no reason that the city’s services should be limited to reactive inspections,โ he said.
Improving living conditions could also drive down rising health care costs. Medicaid makes up about a third of New York stateโs total…
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