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<title>FAFO Report 151</title>

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<H2>Housing and Safety with Regard to Children</H2>
Perceptions concerning the physical safety provided by the house and its
surroundings with regard to children tend to mirror attitudes concerning
the relative safety of the world outside the home versus the world inside
it. In all cases the inside of the house is reported to be safer than the
outside environment, but differential perceptions concerning relative safety
come into play. It is necessary to take a closer look at how Palestinians
evaluate the adequacy of their own homes and the security offered by its
external surroundings.
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<i>Figure 3.6 Availability of safe playing areas for children 12 years or less inside and outside house in percentage of households by locality</i><br>

<img src="bilder/36.gif">

<P>
It is only in Arab Jerusalem (figure 3.6) that a majority of households
report that the local environment provides safe playing areas for children.
Notably, West Bank camp residents find their houses some two times safer
than Gaza camp residents. One reason could be that there is a clear correlation
between the human density of the house and perceptions concerning the safety
the house affords young children, i.e. the more crowded, the less safe (table
3.12).
<p>

<i>Table 3.12 Availability of safe playing areas inside house by density of house</i><br>

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<tr align=center><td></td><td>Available</td><td>Not available</td></tr>
<tr align=center><td>High density</td><td>47</td><td>53</td></tr>
<tr align=center><td>Middle density</td><td>73</td><td>27</td></tr>
<tr align=center><td>Low density</td><td>82</td><td>18</td></tr>

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<P>
However, perceptions concerning children's security and the areas in which
they are protected from injury, do not necessarily correspond to the realities
of children's injury. Respondents were asked if any of the children in the
household 12 years of age or younger had been seriously injured during the
previous two months. Some 17% of households state that they have children
who had been so injured, the fewest injuries occurring in Jerusalem (9%
of households), where average household size is in any case smaller, and
the most in the refugee camps (19% of households). The overwhelming majority
of these children had been injured inside the home. Table 3.13 refers only
to those households with children who had been seriously injured in the
two months prior to the survey period and is broken down on the regional
level with both West Bank and Gaza camps placed into a separate category.
<p>

<i>Table 3.13 Where was the child injured in percentage of households by region</i><br>

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<tr align=center><td></td><td>Gaza</td><td>West Bank</td><td>Arab Jerusalem</td><td>Camps</td></tr>
<tr align=center><td>Inside house</td><td>66</td><td>78</td><td>68%</td><td>78</td></tr>
<tr align=center><td>Outside house</td><td>19</td><td>16</td><td>22</td><td>9</td></tr>
<tr align=center><td>Donít know</td><td>15</td><td>6</td><td>11</td><td>13</td></tr>

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<P>
Household density does seem to be a significant contributory factor in children's
injuries, but in a somewhat indeterminant manner. Whereas, 22% of high density
households reported children injured in the two month period, only 13% of
families living in low density household report injured children. However,
it is uncertain whether household density contributes directly, as one might
expect, to increased injuries to children inside the house.
<p>

<i>Table 3.14 The place of child's injury by density of household</i><br>

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<tr align=center><td></td><td>Inside home</td><td>Outside home</td><td>Don't know</td></tr>
<tr align=center><td>High density</td><td>74</td><td>12</td><td>14</td></tr>
<tr align=center><td>Middle density</td><td>74</td><td>18</td><td>8</td></tr>
<tr align=center><td>Low density</td><td>87</td><td>8</td><td>5</td></tr>

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<P>
A certain correlation does exist, but it relates not so much to children's
injuries as to the respondent's knowledge concerning where the injury has
taken place. Respondents from overcrowded households seem to have less awareness
of what happens to the household's children. Instead of overcrowding per
se, children's accidents inside the house seem much more closely related
to poverty. In general, the poorest third of Palestinian households is twice
as likely as the richest third to have children who had been injured either
inside or outside the house. Controlling for this factor, indoor accident
rates are some 70% higher among the poorest third of Palestinian households
compared to the richest third.

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<a href="../../../../../../../base/mailpage.html">al@mashriq</a>                       960715</pre>

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