(Press-News.org) A private (fee-paying) school and/or a ‘higher status’ (Russell Group*) university education may be linked to better mid-life health—at least in the UK—suggests research published online in the Journal of Epidemiology & Community Health.
Alongside the level of education achieved, the type of educational institution a person attends may also influence subsequent health outcomes, suggest the researchers.
Published research to date indicates that educational attainment is associated with better subsequent health. But other aspects of education, such as the type of institution attended, have largely been ignored, despite its likely impact on future employment prospects and earnings, explain the researchers.
In a bid to plug this knowledge gap, the researchers drew on data from the 1970 British Cohort Study (BCS70), a representative UK group of people born in a single week of 1970. This involved 17,196 babies at baseline, who were subsequently followed up several times between the ages of 5 and 51.
In 2016–18, 12,368 participants aged between 46 and 48 took part in the 10th ‘sweep’ of the study, 8581 (69.5%) of whom were interviewed.
The type of secondary school each person had attended was categorised into private (fee paying), grammar (selective without fees), comprehensive (state funded) and other. Special educational needs schools were excluded.
Everyone who had a degree was asked at the age of 42 about the first university they had attended. Those who had gone to one of the Russell Group universities were classified as having attended a ‘higher status’ university.
The Russell Group universities include 24 self-selected institutions in the UK, renowned for their academic excellence, seminal research, and industry links.
Those people who didn’t go to university were classified into two groups according to the highest qualification they obtained: none or GCSEs only; A-levels/diplomas.
Three areas of health, including cardiovascular risks, physical capabilities, and cognitive abilities, were assessed when the participants were 46 to 48 years old. These were captured by weight (BMI), pulse, and blood pressure; grip strength and standing balance; and memory, verbal fluency and executive function.
Potentially influential childhood factors were also captured, including health and cognitive ability (tests taken at the age of 10); parental education and occupation and household income.
Further analyses were carried out to factor in the home learning environment and parental educational aspirations, to include variables such as how often the parent read to the child (measured at the age of 5), how often the child went to museums/libraries (age of 10), whether the parent had met the child’s teacher in the past year (age of 10) and whether the parent was interested in the child’s education (age of 10, as rated by the child’s teacher).
Analysis of the interview responses showed that most participants had gone to a comprehensive or ‘other’ school (7229; just over 89%). Just under 4% (308) had gone to a grammar school, while 7% (570) had gone to a private fee paying school.
Overall, after adjusting for sex and potentially influential factors, a private school secondary education was associated with better cardiometabolic health outcomes than a comprehensive school education.
Similarly, attending a higher status university was associated with better cognitive function, while no degree was linked to poorer health compared with attendance at a normal status university.
Grammar school attendance was also associated with better cardiovascular and cognitive health than comprehensive school attendance, but this difference weakened after accounting for potentially influential factors.
This is an observational study, and the researchers acknowledge various limitations to their findings. Potentially influential factors, such as family socioeconomic background and cognitive ability are hard to capture comprehensively, they point out.
The study also focused on one generation in the UK who went to school in the 1980s and 1990s amid significant reforms in the UK education system. “The generalisability of the results to the present day remains unclear, especially given the changes in the education system in recent years,” they add.
But they conclude: “Our findings suggest that the type of education could potentially contribute to understanding the links between education and health…Moreover, if this association is causal, future policies aimed at reducing health inequalities could take education quality into account as well as attainment.
“This is particularly important given the increases in university attendance, in which other aspects of the education experience may better distinguish health inequality.”
END
Private school and/or ‘higher status’ university education linked to better mid-life health
Alongside level of education reached, institution type may also be influential say researchers
2024-06-19
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Heavy resistance training around retirement preserves vital leg strength years later
2024-06-19
Twelve months of heavy resistance training—exercise that makes muscles work against a force—around retirement preserves vital leg strength years later, show the follow up results of a clinical trial, published online in the open access journal BMJ Open Sport & Exercise Medicine.
Depletion of leg muscle strength is regarded as a strong predictor of death in older people, so is important to maintain, say the researchers.
Skeletal muscle mass and function naturally decline with advancing age, ultimately often interfering with mobility and autonomy in older people, note the researchers.
Resistance training, which ...
Illinois-led study reveals stable soil moisture variability within fields and opens the door for satellite remote sensing for future measurements
2024-06-19
A multi-institutional study led by University of Illinois and Agroecosystem Sustainability Center (ASC) scientists concluded that, although soil moisture varies significantly both within a single field and from field to field due to varying soil properties and different management practices, soil moisture distribution relative to the field average remains consistent across time within each field.
Over three years, the team used sensor measurements and a high-density campaign to reveal that the drier areas remain the drier areas and the wetter areas remain the wetter areas. The study also deduced this finding, reliable estimations of ...
Shining light on mental health in space science community
2024-06-19
The severity of anxiety and depressive symptoms in the planetary science community is greater than in the general U.S. population, according to a study led by a University of Hawai‘i at Mānoa scientist and published this week in Nature Astronomy.
“After reading about so much anxiety and depression in academia, and as someone who loves both planetary science and psychology, I felt like I needed to do something because there are so many people suffering,” said David Trang, an assistant researcher in the Hawai‘i Institute of Geophysics and Planetology in the UH Mānoa School of Ocean and Earth Science and Technology at the ...
Texas A&M researchers investigating the impacts of space travel on astronauts’ eye health
2024-06-19
As space travel becomes more common, it is important to consider the impacts of space flight and altered gravity on the human body. Led by Dr. Ana Diaz Artiles, researchers at Texas A&M University are studying some of those impacts, specifically effects on the eye.
Gravitational changes experienced by astronauts during space travel can cause fluids within the body to shift. This can cause changes to the cardiovascular system, including vessels in and around the eyes.
As the commercialization of space flight becomes more common and individual space travel increases, astronauts will not be the ...
UCSB's Haewon Jeong receives an NSF Early CAREER Award
2024-06-18
(Santa Barbara, Calif.) — Haewon Jeong, an assistant professor in UC Santa Barbara’s Electrical and Computer Engineering (ECE) Department, experienced a pivotal moment in her academic career when she was a postdoctoral fellow at Harvard University. She was investigating how machine learning (ML) models can discriminate against students in education-related applications. Discrimination, or bias, occurs when a model used to train algorithms makes incorrect predictions that systematically disadvantage a group of people. Bias in ML models can lead to inaccurate or unfair predictions, which can have serious consequences in fields such as healthcare, finance and criminal justice. ...
This new way to recycle steel could reduce the industry’s carbon footprint
2024-06-18
University of Toronto engineering researchers have designed a new way to recycle steel that has the potential to decarbonize a range of manufacturing industries and usher in a circular steel economy.
The method is outlined in a new paper published in Resources, Conservation & Recycling and co-authored by Jaesuk (Jay) Paeng, William Judge and Professor Gisele Azimi.
It introduces an innovative oxysulfide electrolyte for electrorefining, ...
Journal of Nutrition recognizes distinguished Texas A&M nutrition scientist
2024-06-18
MEDIA INQUIRES
WRITTEN BY
Laura Muntean
Paul Schattenberg
laura.muntean@ag.tamu.edu
paschattenberg@ag.tamu.edu
601-248-1891
210-859-5752
FOR ...
Non-native plants and animals expanding ranges 100 times faster than native species, finds new research led by UMass Amherst
2024-06-18
June 18, 2024
Non-native Plants and Animals Expanding Ranges 100 Times Faster than Native Species, Finds New Research Led by UMass Amherst
Native species cannot move fast enough on their own to avoid climate-driven chaos
AMHERST, Mass. – An international team of scientists has recently found that non-native species are expanding their ranges many orders of magnitude faster than native ones, in large part due to inadvertent human help. Even seemingly sedentary non-native plants are moving at three times the speed ...
NASA Associate Administrator Jim Free to deliver keynote address at ISSRDC
2024-06-18
BOSTON (MA), June 18, 2024 – Jim Free, associate administrator for NASA, will deliver a keynote address on Wednesday, July 31, at the International Space Station Research and Development Conference (ISSRDC) in Boston. Free, the senior advisor to Administrator Bill Nelson and Deputy Administrator Pam Melroy, is NASA’s third highest-ranking executive and its highest-ranking civil servant. In addition to leading the agency’s 10 center directors and the mission directorate associate administrators at NASA Headquarters ...
Cost may not keep many people from filling opioid addiction treatment prescriptions
2024-06-18
When people get a prescription for the opioid addiction medication called buprenorphine, they almost always fill it — even if they have to pay more out of their own pocket, a new study shows.
Whether it’s their first prescription for the medication, or they’ve been taking it for months, nearly all patients pick up the order from the pharmacy, according to the new findings from a University of Michigan team. Even among those just starting on buprenorphine, higher costs aren’t a deterrent.
The researchers say this suggests that removing barriers ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
UW-led research links wildfire smoke exposure with increased dementia risk
Most U.S. adults surveyed trust store-bought turkey is free of contaminants, despite research finding fecal bacteria in ground turkey
New therapy from UI Health offers FDA-approved treatment option for brittle type 1 diabetes
Alzheimer's: A new strategy to prevent neurodegeneration
A clue to what lies beneath the bland surfaces of Uranus and Neptune
Researchers uncover what makes large numbers of “squishy” grains start flowing
Scientists uncover new mechanism in bacterial DNA enzyme opening pathways for antibiotic development
New study reveals the explosive secret of the squirting cucumber
Vanderbilt authors find evidence that the hunger hormone leptin can direct neural development in a leptin receptor–independent manner
To design better water filters, MIT engineers look to manta rays
Self-assembling proteins can be used for higher performance, more sustainable skincare products
Cannabis, maybe, for attention problems
Building a better path to recovery for OUD
How climate change threatens this iconic Florida bird
Study reveals new factor involved in controlling calorie expenditure
Managing forests with smart technologies
Clinical trial finds that adding the chemotherapy pill temozolomide to radiation therapy improves survival in adult patients with a slow-growing type of brain tumor
H.E.S.S. collaboration detects the most energetic cosmic-ray electrons and positrons ever observed
Novel supernova observations grant astronomers a peek into the cosmic past
Association of severe maternal morbidity with subsequent birth
Herodotus' theory on Armenian origins debunked by first whole-genome study
Women who suffer pregnancy complications have fewer children
Home testing kits and coordinated outreach substantially improve colorectal cancer screening rates
COVID-19 vaccine reactogenicity among young children
Generalizability of clinical trials of novel weight loss medications to the US adult population
Wildfire smoke exposure and incident dementia
Health co-benefits of China's carbon neutrality policies highlighted in new review
Key brain circuit for female sexual rejection uncovered
Electrical nerve stimulation eases long COVID pain and fatigue
ASTRO issues update to clinical guideline on radiation therapy for rectal cancer
[Press-News.org] Private school and/or ‘higher status’ university education linked to better mid-life healthAlongside level of education reached, institution type may also be influential say researchers