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Warmth for wellbeing

In this project, researchers Dr Mary Darking from the School of Applied Social Science and from the Department of Sociology, University of Sussex, conducted research in which they evaluated a multi-partner intervention to address fuel poverty in 映客直播 and Hove called Warmth for Wellbeing (W4W). This research was funded by the British Gas Energy Trust.

According to Public Health England, 12.3 per cent of households in 映客直播 and Hove are living in fuel poverty (which is approximately 15,479 households) compared to an average of 8.2 per cent across Kent, Surrey and Sussex. Fuel prices, household income and energy requirements all contribute to people becoming fuel poor, as do the structural characteristics of the buildings people live in and the efficiency of their heating systems. Housing tenure is also a key determinant with private rented housing producing much higher levels of fuel poverty compared to houses that are privately owned.

The amount of energy people need to have a warm, well-lit home, with hot water for everyday use, and the capacity to run appliances, varies from household-to-household. Fuel poverty describes the situation where an individual or household cannot afford to heat their home adequately to maintain a standard of warmth and meet their other energy needs. In this situation people have to make choices about how money is spent, such as deciding whether to ‘eat’ or heat’, wash clothes, use lights or take a shower. Living in a cold home can have negative consequences for health and wellbeing, especially among people with long-term health conditions, disabled people, older people and single parent families (). Feeling cold can cause certain illnesses but it can also make mental health wellbeing and chronic pain harder to manage, increasing frailty and reducing how much people are able to use their hands and get out and about, through a worsening of joint pain.

W4W-logo

Project timeframe

This project commenced in November 2015 and ended in April 2017.

Project aims

The aim of the evaluation and the research based upon it was to examine to what extent multi-partnership, cross-sector working can address complex, public health issues such as fuel poverty and provide support to citizens in need.

Project findings and impact

The main finding of the research was that the partnership model and in-depth casework approach adopted by the Warmth for Wellbeing project was effective at identifying fuel poor households and addressing the complex situations they faced, enabling:

  • attentiveness to the household-specific conditions which had led to clients being cold at home (including: poor fabric of home, issues with heating system, lack of money, debt-related problems, complex billing and tariffs)
  • a system of cross-referral or ‘signposting’ supporting clients to access a range of specialist knowledge, including sources of grant funding, home energy adaptation measures and further services through which issues facing households could be addressed a working practice of following-up and ‘staying with’ complex cases until problems had been resolved.

The W4W model is significant because, as the project monitoring data shows, a significant proportion of clients required multiple forms of intervention in order for them to be able to heat their home adequately. These typically involved both an energy assessment home visit and advice on personal finances also involving a visit to the home.

In-depth casework absorbed more resource than was originally anticipated. However, this is consistent with project monitoring data and client stories which demonstrate that barriers to feeling sufficiently warm at home were rarely singular. They were multiple, inter-related and took time to resolve. However, this evaluation demonstrates that once barriers to ensuring people are warm in their homes are removed, clients typically experienced multiple benefits from fuel poverty alleviation that helped improve mental and physical health, and reduce social isolation (eg. by enabling people to re-engage with friends, relatives and communities). Clients described regaining a sense of control over their domestic environment, finances and capacity to care for themselves and their dependents that fundamentally improved their wellbeing.

This research has been used by 映客直播 & Hove City Council and Clinical Commissioning Group to inform further work on fuel poverty intervention in the city.

W4W-final-evaluation-cover

Read the Warmth for Wellbeing Final Evaluation Report.

Research team

Dr Mary Darking

Output

Will, C., Darking M. and Weiner, K. ‘Remaking public health and care in the cracks of the welfare state’, Medical Sociology Conference, York, Sept 2017

Wills, C., Darking M. and Weiner, K. ‘Remaking public health and care in the cracks of the welfare state’, Reconfiguring care infrastructures – austerity and innovation in European welfare service workshop, University of Sussex, Nov 2017

Darking, M and Will C (2017) Warmth for Wellbeing, Final evaluation report

Partners

The evaluation of this important project was conducted jointly by the Universities of 映客直播 and Sussex:

The Warmth for Wellbeing project included:

Age UK
映客直播 and Hove City Council
映客直播 and Hove Clinical Commissioning Group
映客直播 and Hove Energy Services Cooperative (BHESCO)
映客直播 Housing Trust
映客直播 Unemployed Centre Families Project
映客直播 Women’s Centre
British Red Cross
Citizens Advice
Hangleton & Knoll Project
Mind
Money Advice Service
National Energy Action
Possability People
St. Luke’s Advice Service

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