Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
345781 Children and Youth Services Review 2016 14 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Kindergarten readiness is undermined by early childhood exposure to poor housing and disadvantaged neighborhoods•Dynamic neighborhood and housing selection models are employed to reduce selection bias•Poor housing is associated with risk for elevated blood lead levels, residential instability and child maltreatment•These risk factors further lower early literacy scores

Poor housing quality and housing crises have been linked to adverse outcomes for children. However, few studies have focused on the early childhood period or been able to pinpoint how the timing and duration of housing problems contributes to early educational success. This longitudinal study draws on linked administrative records from housing, education, social service and health agencies to examine the influence of exposure to housing neighborhood conditions since birth on school readiness of all children entering kindergarten over a four-year period in a big city school system. Using marginal structural models that properly account for dynamic housing and neighborhood selection, we find that children exposed to problematic housing and disadvantaged neighborhoods have lower kindergarten readiness scores after accounting for other factors. The negative effects of housing problems on kindergarten readiness are partially mediated by child maltreatment incidences, residential instability, and elevated blood lead levels. Communities are advised to pay more attention to distressed housing as a cause of disparities in early child development and school readiness.

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Health Sciences Medicine and Dentistry Perinatology, Pediatrics and Child Health
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