# Employment and the youth mental health crisis in Canada: distinct influences across phases of the school-to-work transition

**Authors:** Véronique Dupéré, Mathieu Caron-Diotte, Nancy Beauregard, Clémentine Courdi, Jiseul Sophia Ahn, Elizabeth Olivier, Kristel Tardif-Grenier, David Litalien

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fpubh.2025.1601463 · 2025-07-31

## TL;DR

Working hours affect young adults' mental health differently depending on whether they are in school or not, with students seeing worse outcomes as hours increase.

## Contribution

This study reveals distinct mental health impacts of employment based on educational status during the school-to-work transition.

## Key findings

- Tertiary students experienced worse mental health with more working hours.
- Non-students saw improved mental health with increased working hours.
- Study-related jobs were linked to higher life satisfaction but not reduced distress.

## Abstract

Employment-related challenges and uncertainties are thought to contribute to the mental health crisis affecting young adults globally. Yet, few studies have examined how employment characteristics relate to young adults’ mental health. This study addresses this gap, considering how the role of employment might vary depending on young adults’ educational status and level.

A representative sample of 6,700 young adults (18–30 y.o.) drawn from Statistics Canada’s Longitudinal and International Study of Adults (2012–2020) was used to examine links between working hours and employment in a study-related job and mental health (life satisfaction, global mental health, psychological distress), beyond prior mental health and background characteristics. Interactions with student status were also incorporated.

Among young adults in tertiary (university, college) education, mental health worsened as working hours increased. For all other participants, the opposite was observed: working more hours was associated with improved mental health. Overall, the best outcomes were observed among tertiary-enrolled students not working, and the worst among youth neither working nor in education. The size of the differences between these groups were non-negligible (with d ranging between 0.37 and 0.47). Across all groups, employment in a study-related job was marginally associated with higher life satisfaction (but not with psychological distress or global mental health).

Working hours contribute to young adults’ mental health in contrasting ways, depending on their position on the school-to-work transition continuum. Enhancing young adults’ access to meaningful employment in study-related jobs with an adapted schedule could help mitigate the youth mental health crisis.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** mental health (OMIM:603663)

## Figures

1 figure with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12350391/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12350391