Development of the Social Housing of Ontario (SHO) Registry by health region: a platform for health research with the social housing population
Gina Agarwal, Melissa Pirrie, Mikayla Plishka, Kumindu Gamage, Ricardo Angeles, Jasdeep Brar, Christie Koester, Guneet Mahal, Francine Marzanek, Manasvi Vanama

TL;DR
This paper describes the creation of a social housing registry in Ontario, which can be used for health research on marginalized populations.
Contribution
The paper introduces the SHO Registry, a new platform for health research focused on the social housing population in Ontario.
Findings
2,109 social housing sites were included in the SHO Registry, with regional differences in ownership and building types.
The SHO Registry can be used to identify LI-NORCs and linked to other datasets for future health research.
Toronto and North West regions had higher proportions of government-owned social housing sites compared to other regions.
Abstract
Social housing plays a critical role in addressing housing inequality and promoting well-being. This paper examines the creation of a registry of social housing sites across all six Ontario Health (OH) regions. For all 47 housing service providers in Ontario, social housing address, provider type, and building type were extracted from their website or from documents provided by the housing organization. The Registry included rent-geared-to-income housing with unique or minimally shared postal codes. Descriptive statistics were analyzed for the housing site characteristics aggregated by OH region. 2,109 social housing sites were included in the final Registry, including 472 designated as seniors only (low-income naturally occurring retirement communities, LI-NORCs). There were regional differences in the proportions of each tenant designation, postal code uniqueness, housing provider…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHealth disparities and outcomes · Housing, Finance, and Neoliberalism · Homelessness and Social Issues
