Background
Recent
findings suggest that the mental health costs of unemployment are related to
both short- and long-term mental health scars. The main policy tools for
dealing with young people at risk of labor market exclusion are Active Labor
Market Policy programs for youths (youth programs). There has been little
research on the potential effects of participation in youth programs on mental
health and even less on whether participation in such programs alleviates the
long-term mental health scarring caused by unemployment. This study compares
exposure to open youth unemployment and exposure to youth program participation
between ages 18 and 21 in relation to adult internalized mental health
immediately after the end of the exposure period at age 21 and two decades
later at age 43.
Methods
The
study uses a five wave Swedish 27-year prospective cohort study consisting of
all graduates from compulsory school in an industrial town in Sweden initiated
in 1981. Of the original 1083 participants 94.3 % of those alive were
still participating at the 27-year follow up. Exposure to open unemployment and
youth programs were measured between ages 18–21. Mental health, indicated
through an ordinal level three item composite index of internalized mental
health symptoms (IMHS), was measured pre-exposure at age 16 and post exposure
at ages 21 and 42.
Ordinal
regressions of internalized mental health at ages 21 and 43 were performed
using the Polytomous Universal Model (PLUM). Models were controlled for
pre-exposure internalized mental health as well as other available confounders.
Results
Results
show strong and significant relationships between exposure to open youth
unemployment and IMHS at age 21 as
well as at age 43. No such significant relationship is
observed for exposure to youth programs at age 21 or at age 43.
Conclusions
A
considered and consistent active labor market policy directed at youths could
potentially reduce the short- and long-term mental health costs of youth
unemployment.
Full article at: http://goo.gl/gmKQqx
1Department of Social Work, Umeå University,
Umeå, SE-90187, Sweden
2Centre for Research on Child and Adolescent
Mental Health, Karlstad University, Karlstad, SE-651 88, Sweden
3Department of Sociology, Umeå University,
Umeå, SE-90187, Sweden
4Department of Public Health and Clinical
Medicine, Umeå University, Umeå, SE-90187, Sweden
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