» Articles » PMID: 29699532

The Impact of Completing Upper Secondary Education - a Multi-state Model for Work, Education and Health in Young Men

Overview
Publisher Biomed Central
Specialty Public Health
Date 2018 Apr 28
PMID 29699532
Citations 6
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Background: Completing upper secondary education is associated with higher work participation and less health-related absence from work. Although these outcomes are closely interrelated, most studies focus on single outcomes, using cross-sectional designs or short follow-up periods. As such, there is limited knowledge of the long-term outcomes, and how paths for completers and non-completers unfold over time. In this paper, we use multi-state models for time-to-event data to assess the long-term effects of completing upper secondary education on employment, tertiary education, sick leave, and disability pension over twelve and a half years for young men.

Methods: Baseline covariates and twelve and a half years of follow-up data on employment, tertiary education, sick leave and disability pension were obtained from national registries for all males born in Norway between 1971 and 1976 (n =184951). The effects of completing upper secondary education (by age 23) were analysed in a multi-state framework, adjusting for both individual and family level confounders. All analyses were done separately for general studies and vocational tracks.

Results: Completers do better on a range of outcomes compared to non-completers, for both fields of upper secondary education, but effects of completion change over time. The largest changes are for tertiary education and work, with the probability of work increasing reciprocally to the probability of education. Vocational students are quicker to transfer to the labour market, but tend to have more unemployment, sick leave and disability, and the absolute effects of completion on these outcomes are largest for vocational tracks. However, the relative effects of completion are larger for general studies.

Conclusion: Completing upper secondary education increases long-term work participation and lowers health-related absence for young men, but effects diminish over time. Studies that have used shorter follow-up periods could be overstating the negative effects of dropout on labour market participation. Multi-state models are well suited to analyse data on work, education and health-related absence, and can be useful in understanding the dynamic aspects of these outcomes.

Citing Articles

Socioeconomic differences in the long-term effects of teacher absence on student outcomes.

Borgen N, Markussen S, Raaum O Eur Soc. 2024; 26(3):639-667.

PMID: 39044744 PMC: 11262431. DOI: 10.1080/14616696.2023.2212744.


A Chronic Disease in Adolescence and Selection to an Educational Path-A Longitudinal Study.

Koivusilta L, Kaltiala R, Myohanen A, Hotulainen R, Rimpela A Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2022; 19(21).

PMID: 36361283 PMC: 9657637. DOI: 10.3390/ijerph192114407.


Educational attainment of adolescents treated in psychiatric inpatient care: a register study over 3 decades.

Holttinen T, Lindberg N, Rissanen P, Kaltiala R Eur Child Adolesc Psychiatry. 2022; 32(11):2163-2173.

PMID: 35932327 PMC: 10576713. DOI: 10.1007/s00787-022-02052-0.


A hybrid landmark Aalen-Johansen estimator for transition probabilities in partially non-Markov multi-state models.

Maltzahn N, Hoff R, Aalen O, Mehlum I, Putter H, Gran J Lifetime Data Anal. 2021; 27(4):737-760.

PMID: 34595580 PMC: 8536588. DOI: 10.1007/s10985-021-09534-4.


Work participation in young Norwegians: a 19-year follow up in a registry-based life-course cohort.

Kristensen P, Hanvold T, Hasting R, Merkus S, Hoff R, Mehlum I Scand J Public Health. 2020; 49(2):176-187.

PMID: 32449464 PMC: 7917564. DOI: 10.1177/1403494820917507.


References
1.
De Ridder K, Pape K, Cuypers K, Johnsen R, Holmen T, Westin S . High school dropout and long-term sickness and disability in young adulthood: a prospective propensity score stratified cohort study (the Young-HUNT study). BMC Public Health. 2013; 13:941. PMC: 4124891. DOI: 10.1186/1471-2458-13-941. View

2.
Lie S, Eriksen H, Ursin H, Hagen E . A multi-state model for sick-leave data applied to a randomized control trial study of low back pain. Scand J Public Health. 2008; 36(3):279-83. DOI: 10.1177/1403494807086979. View

3.
Hertzog C, Schaie K . Stability and change in adult intelligence: 1. Analysis of longitudinal covariance structures. Psychol Aging. 1986; 1(2):159-71. DOI: 10.1037//0882-7974.1.2.159. View

4.
De Ridder K, Pape K, Johnsen R, Westin S, Holmen T, Bjorngaard J . School dropout: a major public health challenge: a 10-year prospective study on medical and non-medical social insurance benefits in young adulthood, the Young-HUNT 1 Study (Norway). J Epidemiol Community Health. 2012; 66(11):995-1000. DOI: 10.1136/jech-2011-200047. View

5.
Curtis L, Hammill B, Eisenstein E, Kramer J, Anstrom K . Using inverse probability-weighted estimators in comparative effectiveness analyses with observational databases. Med Care. 2007; 45(10 Supl 2):S103-7. DOI: 10.1097/MLR.0b013e31806518ac. View