Springer Kristen W, Sheridan Jennifer, Kuo Daphne, Carnes Molly
Department of Sociology, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, Piscataway, NJ 08854, USA.
Child Abuse Negl. 2007 May;31(5):517-30. doi: 10.1016/j.chiabu.2007.01.003.
Child maltreatment has been linked to negative adult health outcomes; however, much past research includes only clinical samples of women, focuses exclusively on sexual abuse and/or fails to control for family background and childhood characteristics, both potential confounders. Further research is needed to obtain accurate, generalizable estimates and to educate clinicians who are generally unaware of the link between childhood abuse and adult health. The purpose of this project is to examine how childhood physical abuse by parents impacts mid-life mental and physical health, and to explore the attenuating effect of family background and childhood adversities.
We analyzed population-based survey data from over 2,000 middle-aged men and women in the Wisconsin Longitudinal Study using self-reported measures of parental childhood physical abuse, mental health (depression, anxiety, anger), physical health (physical symptoms and medical diagnoses), family background, and childhood adversities.
Parental physical abuse was reported by 11.4% of respondents (10.6% of males and 12.1% of females). In multivariate models controlling for age, sex, childhood adversities, and family background, we found that childhood physical abuse predicted a graded increase in depression, anxiety, anger, physical symptoms, and medical diagnoses. Childhood physical abuse also predicted severe ill health and an array of specific medical diagnoses and physical symptoms. Family background and childhood adversities attenuated but did not eliminate the childhood abuse/adult health relationship.
In a population-based cohort of middle-aged men and women, childhood physical abuse predicted worse mental and physical health decades after the abuse. These effects were attenuated, but not eliminated, by age, sex, family background, and childhood adversities.
儿童期受虐与成年后的不良健康后果有关;然而,过去的许多研究仅纳入了女性临床样本,仅聚焦于性虐待,和/或未对家庭背景和童年特征(这两个潜在混杂因素)进行控制。需要进一步研究以获得准确、可推广的估计值,并对那些普遍不了解儿童期虐待与成年健康之间联系的临床医生进行教育。本项目的目的是研究父母对儿童的身体虐待如何影响中年时期的身心健康,并探讨家庭背景和童年逆境的缓冲作用。
我们分析了威斯康星纵向研究中2000多名中年男性和女性的基于人群的调查数据,使用自我报告的父母对儿童身体虐待、心理健康(抑郁、焦虑、愤怒)、身体健康(身体症状和医学诊断)、家庭背景和童年逆境的测量方法。
11.4%的受访者报告曾遭受父母身体虐待(男性为10.6%,女性为12.1%)。在控制了年龄、性别、童年逆境和家庭背景的多变量模型中,我们发现童年期身体虐待预示着抑郁、焦虑、愤怒、身体症状和医学诊断呈分级增加。童年期身体虐待还预示着严重的健康不佳以及一系列特定的医学诊断和身体症状。家庭背景和童年逆境减轻了但并未消除童年虐待与成年健康之间的关系。
在一个基于人群的中年男性和女性队列中,童年期身体虐待预示着虐待数十年后更差的身心健康。这些影响因年龄、性别、家庭背景和童年逆境而减轻,但并未消除。