Deprivation and well-being in squalid living: a propensity score matched cross-sectional study of the English Housing Survey

Abstract Background There is a lack of understanding of people that live in severe domestic squalor (i.e., when their dwelling is grossly unclean/disorganised/unhygienic) and how they might differ from community controls. This study therefore sought to compare people living in squalor in terms of po...

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Main Authors: Mike Norton, Stephen Kellett, Vyv Huddy
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2025-07-01
Series:BMC Public Health
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-025-23440-6
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author Mike Norton
Stephen Kellett
Vyv Huddy
author_facet Mike Norton
Stephen Kellett
Vyv Huddy
author_sort Mike Norton
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Background There is a lack of understanding of people that live in severe domestic squalor (i.e., when their dwelling is grossly unclean/disorganised/unhygienic) and how they might differ from community controls. This study therefore sought to compare people living in squalor in terms of potential differences in deprivation and well-being. Methods Data was extracted from the English Housing Survey. A sample of N = 298 people independently assessed as living in squalor from N = 43,222 household surveys were propensity score matched on seven demographic variables with N = 596 community controls. The two study groups were then compared on measures of deprivation and well-being and these variables were entered into regressions to predict living in squalor. Results People living in squalor reside in significantly more deprived areas but are not significantly less satisfied/happy or significantly more anxious/worthless. An increase of 1 level on the deprivation scale decreased risk of living in squalor by 9%. Conclusions Local deprivation appears to play a significant role in living in squalor. This may create ‘bi-directional causality’ in that local deprivation increases risk of squalor, and living in squalor adds to local deprivation. There needs to be more controlled research regarding squalor, so that targets for intervention (that are malleable) can then be identified, implemented and evaluated.
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spelling doaj-art-b917c07f336b44748544d81b11e8b2e92025-08-20T03:42:02ZengBMCBMC Public Health1471-24582025-07-0125111210.1186/s12889-025-23440-6Deprivation and well-being in squalid living: a propensity score matched cross-sectional study of the English Housing SurveyMike Norton0Stephen Kellett1Vyv Huddy2University of SheffieldUniversity of SheffieldUniversity of SheffieldAbstract Background There is a lack of understanding of people that live in severe domestic squalor (i.e., when their dwelling is grossly unclean/disorganised/unhygienic) and how they might differ from community controls. This study therefore sought to compare people living in squalor in terms of potential differences in deprivation and well-being. Methods Data was extracted from the English Housing Survey. A sample of N = 298 people independently assessed as living in squalor from N = 43,222 household surveys were propensity score matched on seven demographic variables with N = 596 community controls. The two study groups were then compared on measures of deprivation and well-being and these variables were entered into regressions to predict living in squalor. Results People living in squalor reside in significantly more deprived areas but are not significantly less satisfied/happy or significantly more anxious/worthless. An increase of 1 level on the deprivation scale decreased risk of living in squalor by 9%. Conclusions Local deprivation appears to play a significant role in living in squalor. This may create ‘bi-directional causality’ in that local deprivation increases risk of squalor, and living in squalor adds to local deprivation. There needs to be more controlled research regarding squalor, so that targets for intervention (that are malleable) can then be identified, implemented and evaluated.https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-025-23440-6SqualorDiogenes syndromeSevere domestic squalorSelf-neglectWell-beingDeprivation
spellingShingle Mike Norton
Stephen Kellett
Vyv Huddy
Deprivation and well-being in squalid living: a propensity score matched cross-sectional study of the English Housing Survey
BMC Public Health
Squalor
Diogenes syndrome
Severe domestic squalor
Self-neglect
Well-being
Deprivation
title Deprivation and well-being in squalid living: a propensity score matched cross-sectional study of the English Housing Survey
title_full Deprivation and well-being in squalid living: a propensity score matched cross-sectional study of the English Housing Survey
title_fullStr Deprivation and well-being in squalid living: a propensity score matched cross-sectional study of the English Housing Survey
title_full_unstemmed Deprivation and well-being in squalid living: a propensity score matched cross-sectional study of the English Housing Survey
title_short Deprivation and well-being in squalid living: a propensity score matched cross-sectional study of the English Housing Survey
title_sort deprivation and well being in squalid living a propensity score matched cross sectional study of the english housing survey
topic Squalor
Diogenes syndrome
Severe domestic squalor
Self-neglect
Well-being
Deprivation
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-025-23440-6
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AT vyvhuddy deprivationandwellbeinginsqualidlivingapropensityscorematchedcrosssectionalstudyoftheenglishhousingsurvey