Brown University, Department of Sociology, Box 1916, Providence, RI 02912, USA.
Demography. 2009 Nov;46(4):671-94. doi: 10.1353/dem.0.0078.
The educational and economic consequences of poor health during childhood and adolescence have become increasingly clear, with a resurgence of evidence leading researchers to reconsider the potentially significant contribution of early-life health to population welfare both within and across generations. Meaningful relationships between early-life health and educational attainment raise important questions about how health may influence educational success in young adulthood and beyond, as well as for whom its influence is strongest. Using data from the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth 1997, I examine how adolescents'health and social status act together to create educational disparities in young adulthood, focusing on two questions in particular. First, does the link between adolescent health and educational attainment vary across socioeconomic and racial/ethnic groups? Second, what academic factors explain the connection between adolescent health and educational attainment? The findings suggest that poorer health in adolescence is strongly negatively related to educational attainment, net of both observed confounders and unobserved, time-invariant characteristics within households. The reduction in attainment is particularly large for non-Hispanic white adolescents, suggesting that the negative educational consequences of poor health are not limited to only the most socially disadvantaged adolescents. Finally, I find that the link between adolescent health and educational attainment is explained by academic factors related to educational participation and, most importantly, academic performance, rather than by reduced educational expectations. These findings add complexity to our understanding of how the educational consequences of poor health apply across the social hierarchy, as well as why poor health may lead adolescents to complete less schooling.
儿童期和青少年期健康状况不佳造成的教育和经济后果已日益明显,越来越多的证据表明,早期健康对代内和代际人口福利可能有重大贡献,促使研究人员重新考虑这一问题。早期健康与受教育程度之间的重要关联提出了一些重要问题,即健康状况可能如何影响年轻人及其以后的教育成就,以及其影响在哪些人群中最强。本文利用 1997 年全国青年纵向调查的数据,研究了青少年的健康和社会地位如何共同造成成年早期的教育差距,特别关注两个问题。首先,青少年健康与受教育程度之间的联系是否因社会经济和种族/族裔群体而异?其次,哪些学术因素解释了青少年健康与受教育程度之间的联系?研究结果表明,青春期健康状况较差与受教育程度呈强烈负相关,这一关联在控制了观察到的混杂因素和家庭内部不可观察的、随时间不变的特征后依然存在。对于非西班牙裔白人青少年来说,受教育程度的下降幅度尤其大,这表明健康状况不佳对教育的负面影响不仅限于最社会劣势的青少年。最后,我发现,青少年健康与受教育程度之间的联系可以用与教育参与相关的学术因素来解释,最重要的是与学业成绩相关,而不是与教育期望降低相关。这些发现增加了我们对健康不良的教育后果在社会等级中如何适用的理解的复杂性,以及健康不良为何可能导致青少年接受较少的教育。