A new study shows that children whose families move frequently or live
in overcrowded conditions are more likely to suffer from hunger and
poor health than those in stable housing. The study was carried out by
the Children's Sentinel Nutrition Assessment Program (C-SNAP) which has
the largest clinical data base on poor children under age three in
America. C-SNAP has been reporting on the impact of economic conditions
and public policies on children's health since 1998.
A report on the findings was issued jointly with the
Medical-Legal Partnership for Children (MLPC). C-SNAP and MLPC are
based in Boston Medical Center's Department of Pediatrics.
The study found that over 38 percent of families with children
under age three interviewed in Boston Medical Center's emergency room
had moved more than two times in the previous 12 months, lived in
overcrowded conditions, or were doubled up with another family. The
study calls these families the "hidden homeless".
Children whose families had moved two or more times were
almost twice as likely to be in poor health as children in stable
housing. According to C-SNAP founder, Deborah A. Frank, director of
BMC's Grow Clinic, "Like so many of the economic conditions hurting our
young children 'hidden homelessness' is an invisible problem until
doctors see it written on the bodies of infants and toddlers."
The report estimates that there are at least 14,800 "hidden
homeless" families in Boston and the number is likely to grow as the
economy declines. "Low-income families are contending with
unprecedented challenges: increasing unemployment, continued high rates
of foreclosures, rising food prices and heating costs that stretch
family budgets to the breaking point. When you've lost your job and
can't afford the grocery bill, electricity bill, and rent, trade-offs
are made and family health suffers," said Samantha Morton, Deputy
Director of MLPC.
The report offers targeted policy prescriptions. "The hope is
that this report can serve as a guide for beginning to solve this
crisis," said Megan Sandel, MD, a pediatrician at BMC. "The economic
events this winter serve as the perfect storm for our patients. We call
on legislators to make these policy prescriptions a reality for the
better health of our children."
This study was funded by the Paul and Phyllis Fireman Charitable Foundation.



