YoungWork: Young adults’ mental health and labor market exclusion – causes, consequences and trends
The purpose of the project is to shed light on the extent to which school pressure, demanding job conditions, and openness about mental health issues explain the increase in mental health diagnoses among young people.
About the project
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Project period: 01.04.2024 - 31.03.2028 (Active)
- Coordinating Institution: Norwegian Institute of Public Health
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Project Manager:
- Bjørn-Atle Reme, Health Services Research
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Project Participants:
- Fartein Ask Torvik, Centre for Fertility and Health
- Martin Flatø, Centre for Fertility and Health
- Jonathan Wörn, Centre for Fertility and Health
- Magnus Nordmo, Centre for Fertility and Health
- Siri Eldevik Håberg, Centre for Fertility and Health
- Ole Jørgen Røgeberg, Ragnar Frisch Centre for Economic Research
- Bernt Magne Bratsberg, Ragnar Frisch Centre for Economic Research
- Ian Colman, University of Ottawa
- Tilmann von Soest, PROMENTA
- Elin Anita Fadum, Norwegian Armed Forces Health Registry
Summary
The purpose of the project is to shed light on the extent to which school pressure, demanding job conditions, and openness about mental health issues explain the increase in mental health diagnoses among young people.
The working-age population in Norway is shrinking due to demographic processes. To integrate and retain young adults in the labor market is thus considered crucial for sustaining a comprehensive welfare state. However, increasing rates of mental health problems in young persons – especially depression and anxiety – have caused concerns about young adults’ well-being as well as their ability to contribute to the labor force.
Potential explanations of the increase in mental health problems among younger adults in recent years point, among other things, to school pressure and a more demanding labor market. It has also been claimed that the increase in young adults’ reported and diagnosed mental health problems might reflect reduced stigma around mental health problems, better health care provision, and increasing medicalization of conditions that were previously considered “normal”.Against this background, the YoungPsych project examines whether society has become more or less inclusive of young persons with mental health problems and whether young adults with mental health problems today are more (or less) likely to complete education and to be active in the labor force. The project will further examine whether school pressure and stressful employment contribute to recent changes in mental health. Not least, the project will assess to what extent more openness about mental health problems and changing norms related to help-seeking contribute to observed increases in reported mental health problems.
In order to address these issues, the project will make use of a comprehensive collection of Norwegian register data. Results of this project will help policy makers, academics, and the interested public to better understand recent increases in mental health problems in adolescents and young adults and how they might affect the labor markets in the future.