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. 2016 Feb;57(2):196-203.
doi: 10.1111/jcpp.12459. Epub 2015 Aug 26.

Committed to work but vulnerable: self-perceptions and mental health in NEET 18-year olds from a contemporary British cohort

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Committed to work but vulnerable: self-perceptions and mental health in NEET 18-year olds from a contemporary British cohort

Sidra Goldman-Mellor et al. J Child Psychol Psychiatry. 2016 Feb.

Abstract

Background: Labour market disengagement among youths has lasting negative economic and social consequences, yet is poorly understood. We compared four types of work-related self-perceptions, as well as vulnerability to mental health and substance abuse problems, among youths not in education, employment or training (NEET) and among their peers.

Methods: Participants were from the Environmental Risk (E-Risk) longitudinal study, a nationally representative UK cohort of 2,232 twins born in 1994-1995. We measured commitment to work, job-search effort, professional/technical skills, 'soft' skills (e.g. teamwork, decision-making, communication), optimism about getting ahead, and mental health and substance use disorders at age 18. We also examined childhood mental health.

Results: At age 18, 11.6% of participants were NEET. NEET participants reported themselves as committed to work and searching for jobs with greater diligence than their non-NEET peers. However, they reported fewer 'soft' skills (B = -0.98, p < .001) and felt less optimistic about their likelihood of getting ahead in life (B = -2.41, p < .001). NEET youths also had higher rates of concurrent mental health and substance abuse problems, but these did not explain the relationship with work-related self-perceptions. Nearly 60% of NEET (vs. 35% of non-NEET) youths had already experienced ≥1 mental health problem in childhood/adolescence. Associations of NEET status with concurrent mental health problems were independent of pre-existing mental health vulnerability.

Conclusions: Our findings indicate that while NEET is clearly an economic and mental health issue, it does not appear to be a motivation issue. Alongside skills, work-related self-perceptions and mental health problems may be targets for intervention and service provision among this high-risk population.

Keywords: Adolescence; depression; employment; longitudinal studies; mental health; self-perceptions.

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Conflict of interest statement

Declaration of interests: All authors declare no conflicts of interest.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Bars show the percentage of 18-year-old NEET and non-NEET E-Risk study participants who had had a serious mental health problem during childhood or early adolescence. Mental health problems include ADHD and conduct disorder diagnoses made between ages 5 and 12; depression, anxiety, and substance use at age 12; and suicidal behavior between ages 12 and 18.

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