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Scoping review links housing insecurity and indoor pollutants to increased cancer risk and reduced survival

Scoping review links housing insecurity and indoor pollutants to increased cancer risk and reduced…
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Key Takeaway
Note that housing insecurity and indoor pollutants are associated with increased cancer risk and reduced survival.

This scoping review focuses on populations exposed to housing and energy insecurity, including women and low-income households. The scope covers indoor environments where specific exposures occur, such as residential radon, poorly ventilated energy-efficiency retrofits, and combustion-derived pollutants from solid-fuel use. The review does not report a specific sample size or follow-up duration. Instead, it synthesizes qualitative conclusions drawn from the available literature on these environmental factors.

The analysis indicates an increased risk for lung cancer and general cancer outcomes. Additionally, the data points to elevated radon concentrations and a reduced survival rate among affected individuals. The authors note that emerging data link particle-bound radioactivity to reduced cancer survival independent of radon exposure. These associations highlight the complex relationship between housing conditions and health outcomes.

The review concludes that effective cancer prevention and survivorship strategies must integrate equitable energy policies and indoor air-quality protections. Targeted interventions for energy-housing-insecure populations are necessary to reduce disparities. These measures aim to support climate-resilient health systems by addressing the environmental determinants of cancer risk and survival in vulnerable groups.

Study Details

Study typeSystematic review
EvidenceLevel 1
PublishedMay 2026
View Original Abstract ↓
Housing and energy insecurity represent intersecting social determinants of health that shape exposure to indoor environmental carcinogens and, consequently, cancer outcomes. This scoping review examines how inadequate housing conditions and energy poverty influence cancer risk factors and outcomes, including incidence, stage at diagnosis, survival, and mortality. Guided by the Joanna Briggs Institute methodology and the PRISMA-ScR checklist, the review synthesized evidence from peer-reviewed and gray literature published between 2010 and 2025. Findings highlight consistent associations between residential radon exposure and increased lung cancer risk, as well as evidence that poorly ventilated energy-efficiency retrofits may elevate radon concentrations. Combustion-derived pollutants from solid-fuel use similarly increase cancer risk, disproportionately affecting women and low-income households. Emerging data also link particle-bound radioactivity to reduced cancer survival independent of radon exposure. Across exposures, socioeconomic disadvantage, racialized status, and energy insecurity amplify vulnerability and worsen outcomes. These findings underscore the fact that housing and energy systems are structural determinants of cancer control. Effective cancer prevention and survivorship strategies must integrate equitable energy policies, indoor air-quality protections, and targeted interventions for energy-housing-insecure populations to reduce disparities and support climate-resilient health systems.
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