Islamabad, Jan 18: Intensive early education programs
for low-income children have been shown to yield numerous educational benefits,
but few studies have looked more broadly at their impact on health and health
behaviors.
A new study conducted by researchers at Columbia University's
Mailman School of Public Health examines this issue, using data from a the
well-known Carolina Abecedarian Project (ABC), a randomized control study that
enrolled 111 infants in the 1970s and continued to follow them through age 21.
Researchers found that individuals who had received the intensive
education intervention starting in infancy had significantly better health and
better health behaviors as young adults.
The study is only the second to
explore the relationship of early childhood education and adult health benefits.
The first study, based on the Perry Preschool Program, also was conducted by
Columbia professors Peter Muennig, MD, and Matthew Neidell, PhD, on a similarly
small cohort of children, and found behavioral benefits, but no overall health
benefits. The current study is the first randomized control study to
definitively show the health benefit of education.
Findings are online
in the American Journal of Public Health.
The original study enrolled
infants from 1972 to 1977 at the Frank Porter Graham Child Development Institute
in Chapel Hill, NC, where they received an age-appropriate curriculum designed
to enhance cognition and language development starting in infancy. Researchers
had found that infants enrolled in the program had higher IQ by age three and
higher reading and math achievement by 15 years of age, lower rates of teen
depression and greater likelihood of college enrollment compared with a control
group.
The current study expands on the original study to examine the
impact of ABC on three health measures and 11 measures of behavioral risk
factors. The health measures were the number of self-reported health problems
since 15 years of age, a depression index score, and the number of
hospitalizations in the past year. Behavioral risk factors concerned traffic
safety, drug use, and access to primary care. Researchers found that
participants had significantly better health and health behaviors and that these
findings were independent of IQ, educational attainment or health insurance
status.
The original study was small, but it had a very strong effect on
education. Until it came along, the benefit of education had never been proven
using the gold standard in research methods-the randomized controlled trial.
What we have found is that this educational intervention also reduced health
risks like smoking and improved health outcomes as early as age 21," said Dr.
Muennig, assistant professor of Health Policy and Management at Columbia's
Mailman School and principal investigator of the new study. "The health benefits
were quite dramatic."
"While much remains to be learned about both the
pathways linking education to health and the overall effect sizes of education
on health, our study provides causal evidence in support of the hypothesis that
early education enhancements may improve income, reduce crime, and even enhance
the global competitiveness of the American workforce," suggests Dr. Muennig.
"These interventions may be more cost effective than many traditional medical
and public health approaches to improving population
health.
Ends
SA/EN
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Enhanced early childhood education pays long-term dividends in better health
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