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Table 2 Overview of studies included in the review

From: Housing inequalities and health outcomes among migrant and refugee populations in high-income countries: a mixed-methods systematic review

Characteristics

Quantitative studies (n = 38)

Qualitative studies (n = 27)

Total

(n = 65)

Year of publication

ÌýÌýÌý

 Before 2000

1

-

1 (1.5%)

 2000–2009

-

7

7 (10.8%)

 2010–2019

14

11

25 (38.5%)

 After 2020

23

9

32 (49.2%)

Country of study*

ÌýÌýÌý

â€Çã³Ü²õ³Ù°ù²¹±ô¾±²¹

3

8

11 (16.9%)

 C²¹²Ô²¹»å²¹

5

3

8 (12.3%)

 F°ù²¹²Ô³¦±ð

3

1

4 (6.2%)

 G±ð°ù³¾²¹²Ô²â

8

2

10 (15.4%)

â€Çȷɱð»å±ð²Ô

7

-

7 (10.8%)

 U°­

2

4

6 (9.2%)

 U³§

9

3

12 (18.5%)

 Other countries**

7

6

13 (20.0%)

Target population

ÌýÌýÌý

 Migrants (may include refugees)

22

10

32 (49.2%)

 Exclusively refugees

16

17

33 (50.8%)

Assessed housing factors***

ÌýÌýÌý

 Tangible factors

16

8

24 (36.9%)

 Non-tangible factors

13

7

20 (30.8%)

 Tangible and non-tangible factors

9

12

21 (32.3%)

Health outcomes focused

ÌýÌýÌý

 Physical health

11

4

15 (23.1%)

 Mental health

22

13

35 (53.8%)

 Physical and mental health

5

10

15 (23.1%)

  1. UK: United Kingdom; US: United States
  2. * Total number of studies may not add up as three studies were conducted across multiple countries
  3. ** Other countries include Chile (n = 3), Belgium (n = 2), Italy (n = 2), New Zealand (n = 2), Norway (n = 2), Qatar (n = 2), Saudi Arabia (n = 2), South Korea (n = 1) and Spain (n = 1)
  4. *** Tangible factors include (but are not limited to) housing conditions or characteristics (e.g., quality of the physical structure; over-crowding, or number of people per room; access to accommodation or residential mobility; and internal characteristics such as heating and cooling). Non-tangible factors include (but are not limited to) housing affordability, tenure stability and housing satisfaction