Four Out of Ten Young People Affected by the Housing Crisis Suffer From Poor or Regular Mental Health
10 Articles
10 Articles
To arrive at the end of the month and not be able to face the payment of the rent is a situation that, when repeated over time, can result in an anguish difficult to reverse. It is, however, an increasingly widespread reality among young people, who fear that it will worsen if the housing crisis does not give respite. According to the report Inhabiting uncertainty: housing, youth and structural unrest, published on Tuesday and prepared by the Sp…
The crisis of access to housing has become one of the main factors for the deterioration of mental health among Spanish youth. "Having uncertainty: housing, youth and structural unrest", a report presented on Tuesday by the Spanish Youth Council, Oxfam Intermón and Fad Juventud, establishes a direct connection between the increase in psychological discomfort among young people and the difficulties of emancipating, precarious housing and excessiv…
42% of people between the ages of 25 and 34 who are affected by the housing crisis perceive their mental health as regular or bad, according to the report 'Habitting uncertainty: housing, youth and structural unrest', published on Tuesday by the Spanish State Youth Council (CJE), Fad Juventud and Oxfam Intermón.
42% of young people aged 25 to 34 who suffer from the housing crisis perceive their mental health as bad or regular. This is revealed in the report Inhabiting uncertainty: housing, youth and structural malaise, presented on Tuesday by the Spanish Youth Council (CJE), Fad Juventud and Oxfam Intermón. 42% of people aged 25 to 34 who are affected by the housing crisis perceive their mental health as regular or bad, according to the document. The st…
According to Oxfam Intermón’s latest joint report, the Spanish Youth Council (CJE) and Fad “Youth on young people, housing and mental health”, our country presents one of the most late rates of youth emancipation in Europe. The rampant housing instability generates a lack of expectations for the future, as well as an increase in unwanted loneliness among the so-called “unwanted generation.” Main Topics: Mental HealthRead full article
Exorbitant housing prices have become a structural factor of youth unrest. Not only does it make residential independence difficult – the emancipation rate is 14.5%, the worst data since there are records – but it also conditions their mood and emotional state. 42% of people between 25 and 34 years of age affected by the housing crisis perceive their mental health as regular or bad.

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