Schilling Elizabeth A, Aseltine Robert H, Gore Susan
Institute for Public Health Research, University of Connecticut, East Hartford, Connecticut 06108, USA.
BMC Public Health. 2007 Mar 7;7:30. doi: 10.1186/1471-2458-7-30.
Adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) have been consistently linked to psychiatric difficulties in children and adults. However, the long-term effects of ACEs on mental health during the early adult years have been understudied. In addition, many studies are methodologically limited by use of non-representative samples, and few studies have investigated gender and racial differences. The current study relates self-reported lifetime exposure to a range of ACEs in a community sample of high school seniors to three mental health outcomes-depressive symptoms, drug abuse, and antisocial behavior-two years later during the transition to adulthood.
The study has a two-wave, prospective design. A systematic probability sample of high school seniors (N = 1093) was taken from communities of diverse socioeconomic status. They were interviewed in person in 1998 and over the telephone two years later. Gender and racial differences in ACE prevalence were tested with chi-square tests. Each mental health outcome was regressed on one ACE, controlling for gender, race/ethnicity, and SES to obtain partially standardized regression coefficients.
Most ACEs were strongly associated with all three outcomes. The cumulative effect of ACEs was significant and of similar magnitude for all three outcomes. Except for sex abuse/assault, significant gender differences in the effects of single ACEs on depression and drug use were not observed. However, boys who experienced ACEs were more likely to engage in antisocial behavior early in young adulthood than girls who experienced similar ACEs. Where racial/ethnic differences existed, the adverse mental health impact of ACEs on Whites was consistently greater than on Blacks and Hispanics.
Our sample of young adults from urban, socio-economically disadvantaged communities reported high rates of adverse childhood experiences. The public health impact of childhood adversity is evident in the very strong association between childhood adversity and depressive symptoms, antisocial behavior, and drug use during the early transition to adulthood. These findings, coupled with evidence that the impact of major childhood adversities persists well into adulthood, indicate the critical need for prevention and intervention strategies targeting early adverse experiences and their mental health consequences.
童年不良经历(ACEs)一直与儿童及成人的精神问题相关。然而,ACEs对成年早期心理健康的长期影响尚未得到充分研究。此外,许多研究在方法上受到非代表性样本的限制,很少有研究调查性别和种族差异。本研究将高中高年级学生社区样本中自我报告的一生所经历的一系列ACEs与两年后成年过渡期间的三种心理健康结果——抑郁症状、药物滥用和反社会行为——联系起来。
该研究采用两波前瞻性设计。从不同社会经济地位的社区中选取了高中高年级学生的系统概率样本(N = 1093)。1998年对他们进行了面对面访谈,两年后通过电话进行访谈。用卡方检验来检测ACEs患病率的性别和种族差异。将每种心理健康结果对一种ACE进行回归分析,同时控制性别、种族/族裔和社会经济地位,以获得部分标准化回归系数。
大多数ACEs与所有三种结果都有很强的关联。ACEs的累积效应显著,且对所有三种结果的影响程度相似。除性虐待/攻击外,未观察到单一ACEs对抑郁和药物使用影响的显著性别差异。然而,经历过ACEs的男孩在成年早期比经历过类似ACEs的女孩更有可能从事反社会行为。在存在种族/族裔差异的情况下,ACEs对白人心理健康的不利影响始终大于对黑人和西班牙裔的影响。
我们来自城市、社会经济处于不利地位社区的年轻成人样本报告了较高的童年不良经历发生率。童年逆境对公共卫生的影响在童年逆境与成年早期过渡期间的抑郁症状、反社会行为和药物使用之间的紧密关联中显而易见。这些发现,再加上有证据表明童年主要逆境的影响会持续到成年期,表明迫切需要针对早期不良经历及其心理健康后果的预防和干预策略。