Does a college education reduce depressive symptoms in American young adults?

Citation

McFarland, Michael J. & Wagner, Brandon G. (2015). Does a college education reduce depressive symptoms in American young adults?. Social Science and Medicine. vol. 146 pp. 75-84

Abstract

Higher levels of educational attainment are consistently associated with better mental health. Whether this association represents an effect of education on mental health, however, is less clear as omitted variable bias remains a pressing concern with education potentially serving as a proxy for unobserved factors including family background and genetics. To combat this threat and come closer to a causal estimate of the effect of education on depressive symptoms, this study uses data on 231 monozygotic twin pairs from The National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health and employs a twin-pair difference-in-difference design to account for both unobserved shared factors between twin pairs (e.g. home, school, and neighborhood environment throughout childhood) and a number of observed non-shared but theoretically relevant factors (e.g. cognitive ability, personality characteristics, adolescent health). We find an inverse association between possessing a college degree and depressive symptoms in both conventional and difference-in-difference models. Results of this study also highlight the potentially overlooked role of personality characteristics in the education and mental health literature.

URL

http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.socscimed.2015.09.029

Keyword(s)

Depressive symptoms Education Causal Inference Twins

Reference Type

Journal Article

Journal Title

Social Science and Medicine

Author(s)

McFarland, Michael J.
Wagner, Brandon G.

Year Published

2015

Volume Number

146

Pages

75-84

Edition

September 28, 2015

DOI

10.1016/j.socscimed.2015.09.029

NIHMSID

NIHMS733180

Reference ID

7004