Does Moving Children Out of High-Poverty Areas Improve Their Mental Health?

hud-logoFrom 1994 to 1998 the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development gave housing vouchers to more than 4,600 low-income urban families in Baltimore, Boston, Chicago, Los Angeles, and New York. The Moving to Opportunity program allowed families to escape high poverty neighborhoods and move to housing in areas that were more economically viable, had better schools, and lower crime rates.

Follow-up studies of the children of these families were conducted between 10 and 15 years after the families moved out of the high poverty neighborhoods. The results of the follow-up studies found that the moves were highly beneficial for girls in these families but not so for boys. Girls showed reduced rates of depression and were less likely to get into trouble. But boys showed greater rates of depression, higher incidence of post-traumatic stress disorder, and had more conduct disorders.

Jens Ludwig, the McCormick Foundation Professor of Social Service Administration at the University of Chicago and a co-author of the study, stated, “This work demonstrates that the effects of housing mobility interventions are more complicated than one might expect. For boys, the increase in PTSD is comparable to what you see from combat exposure among military veterans, while the reduction in depression among girls is equally massive.”

The authors of the study concluded that “qualitative evidence suggested these differences were due to girls profiting more than boys from moving to better neighborhoods because of sex differences in both neighborhood experiences and in the social skills needed to capitalize on new opportunities presented by their improved neighborhoods.”

The article, “Associations of Housing Mobility Interventions for Children in High-Poverty Neighborhoods With Subsequent Mental Disorders During Adolescence,” was published in the Journal of the American Medical Association. It may be accessed here.

Related Articles

2 COMMENTS

  1. This is interesting. There was another report that boys faired better because they were often seen as a jock or cool, while girls were seen as “angry black women.” I can tell you from personal history and experience, having been born and raised in Baltimore, that the segregation practices there run deep. I am a professional woman, and I was harassed and criminalized in Columbia, MD because it was presumed I was poor and on welfare because I lived in apartments on Harpers Farm Rd. It is the prevailing stereotype that you are on Section 8 when you live in the apartments. The residents stalk and harass you frequently and the police ignore it because they believe you are powerless to act. It is a fair housing issue and I will address it as such in the upcoming month. It is amazing to me that this still needs to be addressed.

    I integrated public schools in Baltimore, and like many, I thought this chapter of the history was closed. It is not. Gentrification and revitalization of urban communities has brought the issue to the surface again. Fortunately, if there is to be an upside, the pattern is the same. One only needs to watch the musical Hair, which eludes to the history of segregation in Baltimore, or read the book, Not in My Neighborhood by Antero Pietila, which recounts the history beautifully. Mr. Pietila is one of the speakers at the upcoming symposium on Fair Housing sponsored at the University of Maryland Carey School of Law on April 25th. I hope you all attend.

  2. The focus can be to move poverty from areas where children and their adults live. Otherwise the country will become saturated with every root cause that blocks humans from progressing. Every child deserves a healthy, happy, protected and cherished space to live and dream and create.

Leave a Reply

Get the JBHE Weekly Bulletin

Receive our weekly email newsletter delivered to your inbox

Latest News

Study Discovers Link Between Midlife Exposure to Racism and Risk of Dementia

Scholars at the University of Georgia, the University of Iowa, and Wake Forest University, have found an increased exposure to racial discrimination during midlife results in an increased risk for Alzheimer's disease and dementia later in life.

Josie Brown Named Dean of University of Hartford College of Arts and Sciences

Dr. Brown currently serves as a professor of English and dean of the College of Arts and Sciences at Point Park University, where she has taught courses on African American, Caribbean, and Ethnic American literature for the past two decades.

UCLA Study Reveals Black Americans are More Likely to Die from “Deaths of Despair” Than White Americans

Deaths among Black Americans that are related to mental-health concerns, such as drug and alcohol abuse or suicide, have tripled over the past decade. Although White Americans deaths of despair mortality rate was double that of Black Americans in 2013, African Americans are now more likely to experience a mental-health related death than their White peers.

Kamau Siwatu to Lead the Texas Tech University College of Education

Dr. Siwatu is a professor of educational psychology who has taught at Texas Tech University for nearly 20 years. Earlier this year, he was appointed interim associate dean for academic affairs.

Featured Jobs