At a glance:
- HMS student channels own experience to address the problem of housing instability among children.
- Children who experience evictions may be at higher risk for neurodevelopmental, other health problems, analysis shows.
- Researchers say housing stability is an important determinant of child health and overall development.
Harvard Medical School student Bruce Ramphal grew up in the bustle and blight of a five-story Bronx apartment building where, from an early age, he saw and heard about neighbors and friends losing their homes. Evictions were a part of life there — a block from the frenetic Grand Concourse thoroughfare and a stone’s throw from a police station nicknamed the Alamo.
“There was just an acute fear of losing our home,” said Ramphal.
Born nearby at Lincoln Hospital in the Mott Haven area, Ramphal was raised by a single mother. The family was poor, he said. His mother and sister emigrated from Guyana to New York City before he was born. After working as a housekeeper for many years, Ramphal’s mother became a home health aide and carefully saved money to purchase a place in Yonkers, N.Y., and leave the Bronx a few years ago.
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