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More than jobs and houses: mental health, quality of life and the perceptions of locality in an area undergoing urban regeneration

More than jobs and houses: mental health, quality of life and the perceptions of locality in an area undergoing urban regeneration
More than jobs and houses: mental health, quality of life and the perceptions of locality in an area undergoing urban regeneration
Background
Urban regeneration initiatives are considered to be one means of making a contribution to improving people’s quality of life and mental health. This paper considers the relationship between lay perceptions of locality adversity, mental health and social capital in an area undergoing urban regeneration.
Methods
Using qualitative methods as part of a larger multi-method study, perceptions of material, and non-material aspects of the locality and the way in which people vulnerable to mental health problems coped with living in adversity were identified as being more highly valued than intended or actual changes to structural elements such as the provision of housing or employment.
Results
Themes derived from narrative accounts included concerns about the absence of social control in the locality, the reputation of the area, a lack of faith in local agencies to make changes considered important to local residents, a reliance on personal coping strategies to manage adversity and perceived threats to mental health which reinforced a sense of social isolation. We suggest these elements are implicated in restricting opportunities and enhancing feelings of ‘entrapment’ contributing to low levels of local collective efficacy. The gap between social capital capacity at an individual level and links with collective community resources may in part have accounted for the absence of improvements in mental health during the early life of the urban regeneration initiative.
Implications/conclusions
In order to enhance quality of life or mental health, agencies involved in urban initiatives need as a basic minimum to promote security, increase leisure opportunities, and improve the image of the locality.
0933-7954
364-372
Rogers, Anne
105eeebc-1899-4850-950e-385a51738eb7
Huxley, Peter
477ece88-a409-441b-b7d8-cb5039a56e2e
Evans, Sherrill
c4ad5c12-218c-4810-b157-d7a68ef6fe72
Gately, Claire
d3e553ca-d404-4c7f-b6ab-dc315e92d610
Rogers, Anne
105eeebc-1899-4850-950e-385a51738eb7
Huxley, Peter
477ece88-a409-441b-b7d8-cb5039a56e2e
Evans, Sherrill
c4ad5c12-218c-4810-b157-d7a68ef6fe72
Gately, Claire
d3e553ca-d404-4c7f-b6ab-dc315e92d610

Rogers, Anne, Huxley, Peter, Evans, Sherrill and Gately, Claire (2008) More than jobs and houses: mental health, quality of life and the perceptions of locality in an area undergoing urban regeneration. Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology, 43 (5), 364-372. (doi:10.1007/s00127-008-0316-2).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background
Urban regeneration initiatives are considered to be one means of making a contribution to improving people’s quality of life and mental health. This paper considers the relationship between lay perceptions of locality adversity, mental health and social capital in an area undergoing urban regeneration.
Methods
Using qualitative methods as part of a larger multi-method study, perceptions of material, and non-material aspects of the locality and the way in which people vulnerable to mental health problems coped with living in adversity were identified as being more highly valued than intended or actual changes to structural elements such as the provision of housing or employment.
Results
Themes derived from narrative accounts included concerns about the absence of social control in the locality, the reputation of the area, a lack of faith in local agencies to make changes considered important to local residents, a reliance on personal coping strategies to manage adversity and perceived threats to mental health which reinforced a sense of social isolation. We suggest these elements are implicated in restricting opportunities and enhancing feelings of ‘entrapment’ contributing to low levels of local collective efficacy. The gap between social capital capacity at an individual level and links with collective community resources may in part have accounted for the absence of improvements in mental health during the early life of the urban regeneration initiative.
Implications/conclusions
In order to enhance quality of life or mental health, agencies involved in urban initiatives need as a basic minimum to promote security, increase leisure opportunities, and improve the image of the locality.

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More information

Published date: 2008
Organisations: Faculty of Health Sciences

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 350641
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/350641
ISSN: 0933-7954
PURE UUID: ea35b521-fb22-4400-bcd9-73d681bc4fe8

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Date deposited: 27 Mar 2013 15:13
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 13:30

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Contributors

Author: Anne Rogers
Author: Peter Huxley
Author: Sherrill Evans
Author: Claire Gately

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