Severe infections during childhood results in lower school performance in adolescence, study says.
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‘Vaccination can influence human capital (knowledge, habits, social and personality attributes, including creativity) through improving educational attainment and performance.’
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Largest Study of the Link Between Childhood Infections and School Achievement The study included nationwide data on 598,553 children born in Denmark between 1987 and 1997. The researchers looked at two measures of childhood infections: hospital admission for infections, an indicator of moderate to severe infections; and prescriptions for anti-infective drugs (such as antibiotics) in primary care, reflecting less-severe infections.
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These infection measures were analyzed for their association with two measures of later school achievement: completing ninth grade and average scores on the final ninth-grade school examinations. Overall, 91.5 percent of the children completed ninth grade. The associations were adjusted for other factors linked to school achievements, such as birth weight, mental and physical health, and parents' education and mental health.
Any hospital contact for infections was associated with an 18 percent reduction in the odds of completing ninth grade (the last year before secondary school in Denmark). The more hospitalizations for infections, the lower the odds of reaching this educational milestone - children with five or more infections requiring hospitalization had a 38 percent reduction in the odds of completing ninth grade.
Among children who completed ninth grade, hospitalization for infections was associated with a small but significant reduction in final exam scores. This relationship was affected by the timing as well as the number of infections, with the greatest impact on children hospitalized within the past year.
Primary care treatment with anti-infective drugs indicating the presence of common, less-severe infections was unrelated to the chances of completing ninth grade. In general, the study found that less-severe infections not requiring hospitalization did not affect the children's cognitive ability.
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"Our findings extend our understanding regarding the association between particularly severe infections during childhood and adolescence and cognitive achievement," Dr. Köhler-Fosberg and coauthors conclude. They note that their findings might be explained by missed school days or socioeconomic factors associated with the susceptibility of acquiring infections.
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The study adds to previous evidence that "vaccination can impact human capital through improving educational attainment and performance," Dr. Bloom and Mr. Stawasz write. These studies "suggest that the health generated by high vaccination rates is not just a consequence - but also a cause - of high income."
Source-Eurekalert