Redirigiendo al acceso original de articulo en 15 segundos...
Inicio  /  Urban Science  /  Vol: 6 Par: 4 (2022)  /  Artículo
ARTÍCULO
TITULO

Measuring the Stress of Moving Homes: Evidence from the New Zealand Integrated Data Infrastructure

Ka-Shing Cheung and Daniel Wong    

Resumen

Moving homes has long been considered stressful, but how stressful is it? This study is an original attempt to utilise a micro-level individual dataset in the New Zealand Government?s Integrated Data Infrastructure (IDI) to reconstruct the Social Readjustment Rating Scale (SRRS) and thereby measure stress at a whole-of-population level. The effects of residential mobility on people?s mental well-being in the context of their stress-of-moving homes are examined. By using difference-in-differences analysis, this study scrutinises the stress level across movers, namely homeowners and renters (i.e., treatment groups) and non-movers (i.e., a control group). The results show that the change in residence increases people?s overall stress levels. Homeowners are more stressed than renters, with non-movers as the counterfactuals. Furthermore, the frequency of change in residences increases individual baseline stress levels. By progressing the understanding of such stresses, residential mobility researchers can contribute to broader discussions on how individuals? interpersonal history and social mobility influence their experience. The whole-of-population-based SRRS will better advance our current ways of measuring mental stress at a population level, which is crucial to broader discussions of people?s well-being.

 Artículos similares

       
 
Bhargav Prakash, Gautam Kumar Baboo and Veeky Baths    
Brain connectivity is studied as a functionally connected network using statistical methods such as measuring correlation or covariance. The non-invasive neuroimaging techniques such as Electroencephalography (EEG) signals are converted to networks by tr... ver más

 
Andrei Nazarov, Flavien Vucko and Dominique Thierry    
Hydrogen in combination with mechanical stress can lead to rapid degradation of high-strength steels through environmentally assisted cracking mechanisms. The scanning Kelvin probe (SKP) was applied to automotive martensitic steel grade MS1500 in order t... ver más

 
S.M. Seyed-Kolbadi, M.A. Hariri-Ardebili, M. Mirtaheri and F. Pourkamali-Anaraki    
This work evaluates the stability of the Boostan earth dam by investigating its long-term performance and interpreting the measured data. To measure the dam response, several sensitive locations are instrumented. This process includes measuring various q... ver más
Revista: Infrastructures

 
Jane Loveday, Grant K. Loveday, Joshua J. Byrne, Boon-lay Ong and Gregory M. Morrison    
Loss of green space in our suburban environment is contributing to increased urban heat. The material properties of surface treatments or landscape elements (LEs) are a determining factor in the amount, timing, and type of radiation present in the local ... ver más
Revista: Urban Science

 
Peter G Furth, Theja VVK Putta, Paul Moser    
When road segments with high traffic stress are excluded, the remaining network of low-stress roads and trails can be fragmented, lacking connections between many origin-destination pairs or requiring onerous detour. Low-stress connectivity is a measure ... ver más