Adolescent depressive symptomatology and young adult educational attainment: An examination of gender differences

Citation

Needham, Belinda L. (2009). Adolescent depressive symptomatology and young adult educational attainment: An examination of gender differences. Journal of Adolescent Health. vol. 45 (2) pp. 179-186

Abstract

Purpose

To examine the association between depressive symptomatology during adolescence and educational attainment in young adulthood and to determine whether this association varies by gender.
Methods

This study uses data from the first and third waves of the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health (Add Health). Symptoms associated with depression are assessed at Wave 1 with the Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale (CES-D). Educational attainment is assessed at Wave 3. Measures include failure to complete high school and failure to enter college (among high school graduates). The analytic sample contains 14,232 respondents aged 11–21 years at Wave 1 and aged 18–28 years at Wave 3. Approximately half the sample is female.
Results

Adjusting for individual and family-level characteristics, depressive symptomatology during adolescence is associated with increased odds of failure to complete high school, but only for girls. Among high school graduates of both genders, depressive symptomatology is associated with failure to enter college.
Conclusions

This study offers support for the hypothesis that mental health problems experienced early in the life course impair status attainment.

URL

http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jadohealth.2008.12.015

Keyword(s)

Depression

Reference Type

Journal Article

Journal Title

Journal of Adolescent Health

Author(s)

Needham, Belinda L.

Year Published

2009

Volume Number

45

Issue Number

2

Pages

179-186

ISSN/ISBN

1054-139X

DOI

10.1016/j.jadohealth.2008.12.015

Reference ID

990