

Zoning Policy is Health Policy
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The downstream effects of exclusionary, low-density residential zoning on health and health equity should make scholars and policy makers focus on reforming zoning to make housing more plentiful and affordable in healthy neighborhoods.
Michael Lens, associate professor of Urban Planning and Public Policy and associate faculty director of the Lewis Center for Regional Policy Studies at the University of California Los Angeles, recently shared his perspective on the topic in a Health Policy Brief published last month.
On today's episode of Health Affairs This Week, Lens joins Health Affairs Deputy Editor of Special Content Rob Lott to discuss his research and how low-density zoning relates to health and health equity.
Related Links:
- Low-Density Zoning, Health, and Health Equity (Health Affairs)
- Eviction And Health: A Vicious Cycle Exacerbated By A Pandemic (Health Affairs)
- Gentrification And The Health Of Legacy Residents (Health Affairs)
- To Stem The Spread of COVID-19, Address The Challenges Of Crowded Housing (Health Affairs Blog)
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Subscribe to UnitedHealthcare's Community & State newsletter.