4.7 Article

Educational quality may be a closer correlate of cardiometabolic health than educational attainment

Journal

SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
Volume 12, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-022-22666-3

Keywords

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Funding

  1. University of Alabama
  2. University of Alabama College Academy of Research, Scholarship, and Creative Activity
  3. University of Alabama, Birmingham/The National Institutes of Health [P30AG031054]
  4. National Institute on Aging of the National Institutes of Health [U01AG052564]
  5. McDonnell Center for Systems Neuroscience at Washington University in St. Louis

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Educational quality may be a stronger predictor of physical health than educational attainment. This study found that a performance-based measure of educational quality was associated with cardiometabolic health, even after controlling for educational attainment, demographic factors, and fluid intelligence. However, perceived control, executive function, and health literacy did not significantly mediate the association between educational quality and cardiometabolic health.
Educational quality may be a closer correlate of physical health than more commonly used measures of educational attainment (e.g., years in school). We examined whether a widely-used performance-based measure of educational quality is more closely associated with cardiometabolic health than educational attainment (highest level of education completed), and whether perceived control (smaller sample only), executive functioning (both samples), and health literacy (smaller sample only) link educational quality to cardiometabolic health. In two samples (N = 98 and N = 586) collected from different regions of the US, educational quality was associated with cardiometabolic health above and beyond educational attainment, other demographic factors (age, ethnoracial category, sex), and fluid intelligence. Counter to expectations, neither perceived control, executive function, nor health literacy significantly mediated the association between educational quality and cardiometabolic health. Findings add to the growing literature suggesting that current operationalizations of the construct of education likely underestimate the association between education and multiple forms of health. To the extent that educational programs may have been overlooked based on the apparent size of associations with outcomes, such actions may have been premature.

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