Faced with the media’s omnipresence of the housing crisis which saturates Australian news daily, a new analysis published today in the Medical Journal of Australia shifts the debate to the field of national health. The authors of this study, Dr. Jennifer Lacy-Nichols, Professor Rebecca Bentley, and Professor Adam Elshaug, warn of the direct health consequences of successive interest rate hikes and soaring rental costs caused by the drastic reduction in the rental housing stock.
According to these experts, improving housing affordability should no longer be viewed solely from an economic perspective, but as a fundamental pillar of a public health prevention strategy aimed at reducing the pressure on an already overburdened healthcare system.
Researchers are posing a crucial question that divides Australian society: should housing remain a tool for wealth creation or be enshrined as an essential social benefit?
To address this challenge, they advocate for the integration of housing cooperatives, the massive development of social housing, and the establishment of minimum health and safety standards in the rental sector as tools for preventative healthcare.
By tackling inadequate housing, Australia could not only stabilize its housing situation but also sustainably improve the physical and mental health of its citizens, thus transforming housing policy into a major driver of collective well-being by 2026.