Why going to an HBCU might be better for Black students’ health

The Guardian US News
by Adria R Walker
March 24, 2026
4 views
3 min read

Quick Insights

The Bottom Line

Study links HBCU attendance to better long-term cognitive outcomes for Black Americans.

How This Affects You

If you are a Black American choosing a college, attending an HBCU may correlate with improved cognitive health in later life compared to other institutions.

AI Summary

A recent study found a correlation between attending a historically Black college or university and better cognitive outcomes later in life for Black Americans, based on a sample of 1,978 participants who went to college between 1940 and 1980. Researchers selected participants who attended high school in states with HBCUs; 35% of the sample actually attended one. The findings suggest that the collegiate environment itself—not just access to higher education—may play a significant role in long-term health and cognitive wellness for Black students. The study period spans decades marked by major legal shifts: the 1952 Brown v. Board of Education decision that outlawed school segregation and the 1964 Civil Rights Act that barred racial discrimination in schools. The research adds empirical weight to arguments that HBCUs provide distinctive institutional benefits beyond traditional educational metrics.

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