Volume 13, Issue 3 pp. 259-267

Keeping warm and staying well: findings from the qualitative arm of the Warm Homes Project

Barbara E. Harrington BA(Hons) MSc

Barbara E. Harrington BA(Hons) MSc

Faculty of Health Social Work and Education, University of Northumbria, Newcastle upon Tyne,

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Bob Heyman BA(Hons) PhD

Corresponding Author

Bob Heyman BA(Hons) PhD

St Bartholomew School of Nursing and Midwifery, City University, London and


Bob Heyman St Bartholomew School of Nursing and Midwifery City University 20 Bartholomew Close London EC1A 7QN UK E-mail: [email protected]Search for more papers by this author
Nick Merleau-Ponty BA(Hons) MSc

Nick Merleau-Ponty BA(Hons) MSc

National Energy Action, Newcastle upon Tyne, UK

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H. Stockton BSc(Hons) MSc

H. Stockton BSc(Hons) MSc

National Energy Action, Newcastle upon Tyne, UK

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Neil Ritchie BA(Hons) MSc

Neil Ritchie BA(Hons) MSc

National Energy Action, Newcastle upon Tyne, UK

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Anna Heyman BSc(Hons) MSc

Anna Heyman BSc(Hons) MSc

Faculty of Health Social Work and Education, University of Northumbria, Newcastle upon Tyne,

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First published: 08 April 2005
Citations: 104

Abstract

This paper presents findings from the qualitative arm of the Warm Homes Project, a programme of research concerned with the nature of fuel poverty, its alleviation and its relationship to family health. Much of the research into fuel poverty, which results from various combinations of low income and fuel inefficiency, has drawn upon quantitative paradigms. Experiences of, and coping with, fuel poverty have not been well explored. Data for the present study were obtained through qualitative interviews with household members about the above issues. The findings suggest that the expectations of those in fuel poverty about staying warm, and their beliefs about the relationship between warmth and health, vary considerably. Fuel poverty often had wider ramifications, impacting on quality of life in complex ways. The respondents took steps to alleviate cold, but their strategies varied. Coping was affected by informational limitations as well as cost constraints. Measures designed to alleviate fuel poverty should take into account its wider social meaning within the lives of household members.

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