Understanding the Benefits of Different Types and Timing of Education for Mental Health: A Sequence Analysis Approach

Vable AM, Duarte C d P, Wannier R, Chan-Golston AM, Cohen AK, Glymour M, Ream RK, Yen IH. Understanding the Benefits of Different Types and Timing of Education for Mental Health: A Sequence Analysis Approach. The Journals of Gerontology: Series B. 2021.

Abstract

Objectives: Individuals increasingly experience delays or interruptions in schooling; we evaluate the association between these non-traditional education trajectories and mental health. Methods: Using year-by-year education data for 7,501 National Longitudinal Survey of Youth 1979 participants, ages 14-48 (262,535 person-years of education data), we applied sequence analysis and a clustering algorithm to identify educational trajectory groups, incorporating both type and timing to credential. Linear regression models, adjusted for early-life confounders, evaluated relationships between educational trajectories and mental health component scores (MCS) from the 12-item short form instrument at age 50. We evaluated effect modification by race, gender, and race by gender. Results: We identified 24 distinct educational trajectories based on highest credential and educational timing. Compared to high school (HS) diplomas, < HS (beta=-3.41, 95%CI:-4.74,-2.07) and general educational development credentials (GEDs) predicted poorer MCS (beta=-2.07,95%CI:-3.16,-0.98). The following educational trajectories predicted better MCS: some college immediately after High School (beta=1.52, 95%CI:0.68,2.37), Associate degrees after long interruptions (beta=1.73, 95%CI:0.27,3.19), and graduate school soon after Bachelor's completion (beta=1.13, 95%CI:0.21,2.06). Compared to White men, Black women especially benefited from educational credentials higher than HS in predicting MCS. Conclusions: Both type and timing of educational credential predicted mental health. Black women's mental higher especially benefited from higher educational credentials.

Keywords: education; educational trajectories; health disparities; mental health; sequence analysis.

Last updated on 12/02/2022