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To better understand these dynamics, clinicians are exploring potential relationships between their patients’ life experiences and their symptoms of disease. In addition, healthcare organizations are investing in screenings and research, as well as connecting patients to community resources to help address health needs beyond the walls of the exam room.
Housing, nutrition, education and safe outdoor spaces are fundamental requirements for optimal health. But despite their strong influence on health, access to these resources is unevenly distributed.
Where you live: The U.N. estimates that 2.8 billion people worldwide live in unsafe, inadequate or unaffordable housing, which can increase infectious disease transmission, aggravate respiratory problems such as asthma and worsen mental health. As part of its Healthy People 2030 campaign, the U.S. Office of Disease Promotion and Prevention and Health Promotion set a goal to reduce the number of households that spend more than 30% of their income on housing, commonly considered the threshold of affordability.
When people pay less for housing, they can afford other crucial needs. Children in families that receive housing subsidies are more likely to have access to nutritious food and to meet well-child standards – like as maintaining a healthy weight and reaching developmental milestones – than those on the waitlist for subsidies.
Because these factors play such a crucial role in health and longevity, caregivers and healthcare organizations are making them a priority. In 2024, the U.S. Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services began to require hospitals to ask about social drivers of health as part of all inpatient admissions, covering subjects such as stable housing and access to healthy food and transportation. The People’s Health Movement, founded in Bangladesh and now active in around 70 countries, campaigns to improve social factors that support health, such as adequate nutrition.
Governments and civil society groups also play a role in addressing disparities of access to care. According to a recent World Health Organization report, although inequities in maternal care persist in high-income countries, low- and lower-middle-income countries still account for 94% of maternal deaths. In Kenya, an estimated 16 women die each day from pregnancy-related causes, one of the highest maternal mortality rates in East Africa. Many of these deaths are preventable, rooted in a lack of access to trained staff and essential diagnostic tools. To address these gaps, the Lwala Community Alliance, funded by the GE HealthCare Foundation, is supporting sonographer training and the use of ultrasound machines to diagnose high-risk conditions during pregnancy.