Residential mobility in childhood and health outcomes: a systematic review

Objective: To assess evidence for residential mobility in childhood having an adverse association with health outcomes through the life course. Methods: A systematic search of medical and social sciences literature was undertaken to identify research defining residential mobility as an independent variable and in which health outcomes were described and objectively measured. Studies were excluded that investigated international migration for asylum or were limited to educational outcomes. Two reviewers assessed each study using quality criteria with particular attention to the consideration of confounders and potential for bias. Data were extracted for analysis using a structured form. Results: Twenty-two studies were included for this review. Outcomes identified in association with residential mobility included: higher levels of behavioural and emotional problems; increased teenage pregnancy rates; accelerated initiation of illicit drug use; adolescent depression; reduced continuity of healthcare. Studies assessed as having lower quality were less likely to demonstrate statistically significant effects. Heterogeneity precluded meta-analysis. Conclusions: Residential mobility interacts at neighbourhood, family and individual levels in cumulative and compounding ways with significance for the wellbeing of children. High frequency residential change is potentially a useful marker for the clinical risk of behavioural and emotional problems. The evidence supports the reorientation of health services effectively to engage these residentially mobile children for whom health and psychological needs may be identified. The impact of housing and economic policies on childhood residential mobility should be evaluated considering this evidence.

[1]  M. Knudson-Cooper,et al.  The stress of a family move as a precipitating factor in children's burn accidents. , 1982, Journal of human stress.

[2]  J. Teachman,et al.  Do Residential Conditions Explain the Relationship Between Living Arrangements and Adolescent Behavior , 2004 .

[3]  D. Dewit,et al.  Frequent childhood geographic relocation: its impact on drug use initiation and the development of alcohol and other drug-related problems among adolescents and young adults. , 1998, Addictive behaviors.

[4]  Z. Stoneman,et al.  Effects of residential instability on Head Start children and their relationships with older siblings: influences of child emotionality and conflict between family caregivers. , 1999, Child development.

[5]  M. Feehan,et al.  Childhood adversity and later mortality in an urban African American cohort. , 2003, American journal of public health.

[6]  E. Mitchell,et al.  Residential mobility and sudden infant death syndrome , 1998, Journal of paediatrics and child health.

[7]  J. Warren,et al.  Appraisal, social support, and life events: predicting outcome behavior in school-age children. , 2000, Child development.

[8]  R. D. Coddington,et al.  The significance of life events as etiologic factors in the diseases of children. II. A study of a normal population. , 1972, Journal of psychosomatic research.

[9]  S. Stack The Effect of Geographic Mobility on Premarital Sex. , 1994 .

[10]  P. Heslop,et al.  Housing Deprivation and Health: A Longitudinal Analysis , 2000 .

[11]  Mark P. Taylor,et al.  Tied Down or Room to Move? Investigating the Relationships between Housing Tenure, Employment Status and Residential Mobility in Britain , 2002 .

[12]  M. Kelley,et al.  Geographic mobility, family, and maternal variables as related to the psychosocial adjustment of military children. , 2003, Military medicine.

[13]  James P. Smith,et al.  Remembrances of things past: test–retest reliability of retrospective migration histories , 2002 .

[14]  D. Stokols,et al.  The Psychological Context of Residential Mobility and Weil-Being , 1982 .

[15]  R. Wiggins,et al.  Migration, family structure and children's well‐being: a multi‐level analysis of the second generation of the 1958 Birth Cohort Study , 2002 .

[16]  R. Bures,et al.  Childhood residential stability and health at midlife. , 2003, American journal of public health.

[17]  T. Waterston,et al.  Social capital: a key factor in child health inequalities , 2004, Archives of Disease in Childhood.

[18]  M. Fowler,et al.  Geographic mobility and children's emotional/behavioral adjustment and school functioning. , 1994, Pediatrics.

[19]  C. Izard,et al.  Family instability and the problem behaviors of children from economically disadvantaged families. , 1999, Developmental psychology.

[20]  G. Fitzmaurice,et al.  Socio-economic status, family disruption and residential stability in childhood: relation to onset, recurrence and remission of major depression , 2003, Psychological Medicine.

[21]  Peter H. Rossi,et al.  Why Families Move , 1956 .

[22]  G. S. Pettit,et al.  Neighborhood Structure, Parenting Processes, and the Development of Youths' Externalizing Behaviors: A Multilevel Analysis , 2003, American journal of community psychology.

[23]  H. Vuorinen Family Resources and Children's Use of Primary Health Care Services in Finland in 1979 , 1990, Scandinavian journal of social medicine.

[24]  C. Mustard,et al.  Continuity of pediatric ambulatory care in a universally insured population. , 1996, Pediatrics.

[25]  E. Schor Family pediatrics: report of the Task Force on the Family. , 2003, Pediatrics.

[26]  J. J. Cutuli,et al.  Resilience in Development , 2009 .

[27]  M. Wadsworth Health inequalities in the life course perspective. , 1997, Social science & medicine.

[28]  L. Long International Perspectives on the Residential Mobility of America's Children. , 1992 .

[29]  Emory L. Cowen,et al.  Stressful Life Events, Support, and Children's School Adjustment , 1989 .

[30]  Janet Badcock Health for all children. , 1990, Archives of disease in childhood.

[31]  M. Shinn,et al.  The relationship of residential instability to medical care utilization among poor mothers in New York City. , 1999, Medical care.

[32]  L. Long Changing Residence: Comparative Perspectives on its Relationship to Age, Sex, and Marital Status , 1992 .

[33]  I. Olkin,et al.  Meta-analysis of observational studies in epidemiology - A proposal for reporting , 2000 .

[34]  Cathryne L. Schmitz,et al.  The Interconnection of Childhood Poverty and Homelessness: Negative Impact/Points of Access , 2001 .

[35]  P. Newacheck,et al.  Impact of family relocation on children's growth, development, school function, and behavior. , 1993, JAMA.

[36]  K. Schoendorf,et al.  Families on the move and children's health care. , 1993, Pediatrics.

[37]  S. Logan Research and equity in child health. , 2003, Pediatrics.

[38]  R. D. Coddington,et al.  The signifance of life events as etiologic factors in the diseases of children. I. A survey of professional workers. , 1972, Journal of psychosomatic research.

[39]  E. Adam,et al.  Home sweet home(s): parental separations, residential moves, and adjustment problems in low-income adolescent girls. , 2002, Developmental psychology.

[40]  K. Tooley The role of geographic mobility in some adjustment problems of children and families. , 1970, Journal of the American Academy of Child Psychiatry.

[41]  M. Greenblatt,et al.  Residential instability in adolescent inpatients. , 1989, Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry.

[42]  Peter H. Rossi,et al.  Why Families Move: A Study in the Social Psychology of Urban Residential Mobility. , 1956 .