Higher education attainment does not improve the adult employment outcomes of adolescents with ill health
This paper assesses whether attaining a higher education improves the chances of employment in adulthood amongst those who had a chronic health condition in adolescence. Using longitudinal analysis of twelve waves of the nationally representative Household Income and Labour Dynamics in Australia Sur...
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doaj-3595edc4a7b040dda4e3aa5935414ae02020-11-25T01:20:06ZengGriffith UniversityJournal of Social Inclusion1836-88082016-07-01714958612Higher education attainment does not improve the adult employment outcomes of adolescents with ill healthEmily Joy Callander0Deborah J Schofield1Rupendra N Shrestha2James Cook UniversityUniversity of SydneyUniversity of SydneyThis paper assesses whether attaining a higher education improves the chances of employment in adulthood amongst those who had a chronic health condition in adolescence. Using longitudinal analysis of twelve waves of the nationally representative Household Income and Labour Dynamics in Australia Survey, conducted between 2001 and 2012, a cohort of adolescents aged 15 to 21 in Wave 1 were followed through to age 24 (n=624). The results show that those who did have a chronic health condition during adolescence were2.4 times more likely to not be employed at age 24 compared to those who did not have a chronic health condition (95% CI: 1.4 – 4.4, p=0.0024). The results were adjusted for age, sex, education attainment at age 24, health status at age 24 and household income poverty status at age 24. Amongst those who did have a chronic health condition during adolescence there was no significant difference in the likelihood of being employed for those with a Year 12 and below (p=0.1087) level of education attainment or those with a Diploma, Certificate III or IV (p=0.6366) compared to those with a university degree. Education attainment was not shown to mitigate the impact of having a chronic health condition during adolescence on adult employment outcomes. Keywords: employment; chronic health conditions; poverty; living standards; longitudinal.https://josi.journals.griffith.edu.au/index.php/inclusion/article/view/801 |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Emily Joy Callander Deborah J Schofield Rupendra N Shrestha |
spellingShingle |
Emily Joy Callander Deborah J Schofield Rupendra N Shrestha Higher education attainment does not improve the adult employment outcomes of adolescents with ill health Journal of Social Inclusion |
author_facet |
Emily Joy Callander Deborah J Schofield Rupendra N Shrestha |
author_sort |
Emily Joy Callander |
title |
Higher education attainment does not improve the adult employment outcomes of adolescents with ill health |
title_short |
Higher education attainment does not improve the adult employment outcomes of adolescents with ill health |
title_full |
Higher education attainment does not improve the adult employment outcomes of adolescents with ill health |
title_fullStr |
Higher education attainment does not improve the adult employment outcomes of adolescents with ill health |
title_full_unstemmed |
Higher education attainment does not improve the adult employment outcomes of adolescents with ill health |
title_sort |
higher education attainment does not improve the adult employment outcomes of adolescents with ill health |
publisher |
Griffith University |
series |
Journal of Social Inclusion |
issn |
1836-8808 |
publishDate |
2016-07-01 |
description |
This paper assesses whether attaining a higher education improves the chances of employment in adulthood amongst those who had a chronic health condition in adolescence. Using longitudinal analysis of twelve waves of the nationally representative Household Income and Labour Dynamics in Australia Survey, conducted between 2001 and 2012, a cohort of adolescents aged 15 to 21 in Wave 1 were followed through to age 24 (n=624). The results show that those who did have a chronic health condition during adolescence were2.4 times more likely to not be employed at age 24 compared to those who did not have a chronic health condition (95% CI: 1.4 – 4.4, p=0.0024). The results were adjusted for age, sex, education attainment at age 24, health status at age 24 and household income poverty status at age 24. Amongst those who did have a chronic health condition during adolescence there was no significant difference in the likelihood of being employed for those with a Year 12 and below (p=0.1087) level of education attainment or those with a Diploma, Certificate III or IV (p=0.6366) compared to those with a university degree. Education attainment was not shown to mitigate the impact of having a chronic health condition during adolescence on adult employment outcomes.
Keywords: employment; chronic health conditions; poverty; living standards; longitudinal. |
url |
https://josi.journals.griffith.edu.au/index.php/inclusion/article/view/801 |
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