Explanations -  
Provide pathways 
to understanding

Building Blocks - Explanations

Explaining how a problem happens, who is responsible, the effects and what to do, is different from just describing a problem. To surface better understandings for people about decent homes, we also need to provide better explanations.

In strategic communication a good explanation: 

Under this Building Block we will talk about five elements to consider in building better explanations: frames, metaphors, using facts, explain in a chain, name 
the agent. 

Frames

Frames

Avoid

Embrace

Avoid

Framing home health problems and solutions as an issue of individual choice. This frames the solution as an individual one not a structural one.

“People not turning on the heater is causing health issues.”

Embrace

Framing our collective capability to do something about home health. This encourages helpful thinking that we can work together to solve the problem as we have done with other problems before. 

“We have the knowledge and capabilities to ensure every New Zealander can feel at home in their home. The Warmer Kiwi Homes programme has shown how when researchers, government policy-makers, local council advisors and community organisations work together we can improve children and family health by improving homes.” 

Avoid

Talking about individual responsibility for managing exposure to unhealthy homes. 

“Mothers are responsible for making sure their children are not exposed to mould.”

Embrace

Framing the specific systems and structures that need to be improved. 

“People in government can legislate and resource to ensure all homes are affordable to heat and ventilate.”

Avoid

Framing unhealthy homes as normal and living in them as a choice/ rite of passage. It taps into unhelpful thinking that the problem is too challenging to solve. It also surfaces individualistic thinking (I will lose something). 

“I lived in a cold, damp flat when I was 
a student and I survived – we’ve all done it.”

Embrace

Using health and wellbeing frames, and talking about public health as a common good.

“People in government can ensure that we all live in homes that do their job, and deliver health and wellbeing for us all.”

Metaphors

Metaphors take something familiar, that we understand on a practical everyday level, and connect it to something more abstract or complex as a way to help simplify and explain it. Using tested metaphors in your messages can help short-cut people to understanding. 

These metaphors all help explain key concepts of decent homes and redirect unhelpful thinking to more productive ground. 

Healthy housing as infrastructure

It works to highlight the systemic nature of housing and its function as a fundamental determinant of wellbeing. 

What does this sound like? 

“Decent housing provides the infrastructure of care, connection, 
and contribution. Decent homes allow people to contribute to 
and participate in our communities. They allow people to get work and get to work and to keep kids in school. Decent homes keep people healthy.”

Homes have a job to do 

Homes have a job to do – to keep us all warm, dry, safe, healthy – enable us all to care, connect and contribute. This metaphor helps focus attention on the active role of homes in providing basic human needs and rights – shelter, warmth, security etc.

What does this sound like? 

“With at least a third of New Zealand homes still not performing well enough to do their job of keeping people warm and dry, and with housing costs increasingly unaffordable, many New Zealanders have no option but to live in unhealthy homes.”

Upstream environments, downstream health

This metaphor works to get people to think more helpfully about the connections between environmental factors and human health and wellbeing and the need for intervention and prevention.

What does this sound like? 

“The way in which we resource and regulate housing creates 
the conditions for human health and wellbeing. The cold, damp homes we experience ‘downstream’ is a consequence of poor upstream regulation. We need to work together upstream to create positive housing conditions for human health. This will make sure 
that what flows downstream offers a healthy and safe environment for all of us.”

Avoid

Embrace

Avoid

Housing market

Embrace

Decent homes as infrastructure for care, connection and contribution

Avoid

House as an asset 

Embrace

Homes have a job to do – keep us all warm or cool, dry, safe, healthy – enable us all to care, connect and contribute 

Avoid

Decent homes as a trade-off or a financial/ social preference (or ‘high standard’)

Embrace

Decent homes lead to downstream improvements in health, education, employment, community engagement

Special Topic: Making home health tangible 

The issue of home health does, by its nature, mean we are communicating about something that is often invisible/ intangible to people. The challenge is to make the issue more visible and physical. One way to do this is to describe the physical aspects of healthy home performance such as smell, taste, feel and how it can be seen. This can be done by talking about the discomfort of unhealthy homes – cold and damp, overheating etc – and about what we see/ experience – mould, condensation, high power use, noise, kids with runny noses all the time, worry. 

Replace

Facts Head

Using facts

Facts are a character in your story, they need to be presented as part of a fuller explanation in order to deepen understanding. Facts presented on their own don’t shift thinking. 

To help tell your story, choose a few limited facts and talk about them in a way that makes them easier to understand and recall.

Chain head

Explain in a chain

Presenting our information in this order works with our fast-thinking brains to help us understand.

Vision and/or values

We have the knowledge and capabilities to ensure every New Zealander can feel at home in their home. But currently those most vulnerable in our communities are those most likely to be locked out of the option to live in a healthy home 

Cause

New Zealand is cold and damp for over half the year, but inadequate building standards and lack of knowledge in the past have resulted in many homes today that are not fit-for-purpose.

Impact

Close to half of the population currently live in homes that are expensive or impossible to keep warm and dry. Breathing cold, damp air causes respiratory illness, impacts on school and work participation, and affects mental health. Excessive energy costs contribute to poverty and energy hardship.

Solution

By working together we can build on good work already being done to retrofit and build homes that are cost-effective and easy to heat, cool and ventilate. People in government can ensure energy performance measures are required for all homes at point of sale and rent, and resource retrofits to bring old homes up to standard. 

Values

A healthy thriving community depends on healthy homes for all of us. When we work together, using the tools at our disposal, we can make this a reality. 

Agents

Name the agent

We want people to understand that there are things they can do to change systems to fix issues. Headlines such as “we’re making progress toward warmer homes” fail to name a person or agent involved in the problem. This makes it hard for people to see who needs to act and what needs to be done. 

One way to help people lift their gaze and see what needs to happen is to name the specific agents of change within the system. For example, we can talk about members of a ‘healthy housing team’ that includes public health experts, as well as people in government who can make decisions that have a positive effect on systems and structures. 

What does this sound like? 

This helps to draw people’s focus to aspects of home health that people do have control over and gives them a sense of competence.