An education gradient in health, a health gradient in education, or a confounded gradient in both?

Soc Sci Med. 2016 Apr:154:18-27. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2016.02.029. Epub 2016 Feb 23.

Abstract

There is a positive gradient associating educational attainment with health, yet the explanation for this gradient is not clear. Does higher education improve health (causation)? Do the healthy become highly educated (selection)? Or do good health and high educational attainment both result from advantages established early in the life course (confounding)? This study evaluates these competing explanations by tracking changes in educational attainment and Self-rated Health (SRH) from age 15 to age 31 in the National Longitudinal Study of Youth, 1997 cohort. Ordinal logistic regression confirms that high-SRH adolescents are more likely to become highly educated. This is partly because adolescent SRH is associated with early advantages including adolescents' academic performance, college plans, and family background (confounding); however, net of these confounders adolescent SRH still predicts adult educational attainment (selection). Fixed-effects longitudinal regression shows that educational attainment has little causal effect on SRH at age 31. Completion of a high school diploma or associate's degree has no effect on SRH, while completion of a bachelor's or graduate degree have effects that, though significant, are quite small (less than 0.1 points on a 5-point scale). While it is possible that educational attainment would have greater effect on health at older ages, at age 31 what we see is a health gradient in education, shaped primarily by selection and confounding rather than by a causal effect of education on health.

Keywords: Education gradient in health; Educational attainment; Fixed-effects; Health gradient in education; Self-rated health; Young adults.

MeSH terms

  • Adolescent
  • Adult
  • Educational Status
  • Female
  • Health Status Disparities*
  • Health Surveys
  • Humans
  • Logistic Models
  • Longitudinal Studies
  • Male
  • United States
  • Young Adult