Rural/urban differences in receipt of governmental rental assistance: Relationship to health and disability

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Abstract

Purpose: Housing is essential to health. Governmental rental assistance is one way to increase access to affordable housing, but little is known about how it varies by rural/urban location. This paper seeks to address that gap by examining rural/urban and within-rural differences in receipt of rental assistance, with particular attention differences by health and disability. Methods: We used data from the 2021 National Health Interview Survey (n = 28,254) to conduct bivariate analyses to identify significant differences in receipt of rental assistance by rural/urban location. We then conducted logistic regression analyses to generate odds ratios of receiving rental assistance, adjusting for self-rated health, disability, sociodemographic characteristics, and the US Census region. Findings: When limiting the sample to those who rent (20.6% of rural residents and 29.6% of urban residents), rural residents were nearly 5 percentage points more likely to receive rental assistance (13.1% vs 8.2%, P

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APA

Henning-Smith, C., Swendener, A., Rydberg, K., Lahr, M., & Yam, H. (2024). Rural/urban differences in receipt of governmental rental assistance: Relationship to health and disability. Journal of Rural Health, 40(2), 394–400. https://doi.org/10.1111/jrh.12800

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