McLaughlin Katie A, Green Jennifer Greif, Gruber Michael J, Sampson Nancy A, Zaslavsky Alan M, Kessler Ronald C
Department of Health Care Policy, Harvard Medical School, 180 Longwood Ave, Boston, MA 02115, USA.
Arch Gen Psychiatry. 2010 Feb;67(2):124-32. doi: 10.1001/archgenpsychiatry.2009.187.
Although significant associations of childhood adversities (CAs) with adult mental disorders have been widely documented, associations of CAs with onset and persistence of disorders have not been distinguished. This distinction is important for conceptual and practical purposes.
To examine the multivariate associations of 12 retrospectively reported CAs with persistence of adult DSM-IV disorders in the National Comorbidity Survey Replication.
Cross-sectional community survey.
Household population in the United States.
Nationally representative sample of 5692 adults.
Recency of episodes was assessed separately for each of 20 lifetime DSM-IV mood, anxiety, disruptive behavior, and substance use disorders in respondents with a lifetime history of these disorders using the Composite International Diagnostic Interview. Predictors of persistence were examined using backward recurrence survival models to predict time since most recent episode controlling for age at onset and time since onset.
The CAs involving maladaptive family functioning (parental mental illness, substance use disorder, criminality, family violence, physical and sexual abuse, and neglect) but not other CAs were significantly but modestly related to persistence of mood, substance abuse, and anxiety disorders. Number of maladaptive family functioning CAs had statistically significant, but again substantively modest, subadditive associations with the same outcomes. Exposure to multiple other CAs was significantly associated with persistence of mood and anxiety disorders. Associations remained statistically significant throughout the life course, although the substantive size of associations indicated by simulations showing time to most recent episode would increase by only 1.6% (from a mean of 8.3 years to a mean of 8.4 years) in the absence of CAs.
The overall statistically significant associations of CAs with adult DSM-IV/Composite International Diagnostic Interview disorders are due largely to component associations with onsets rather than with persistence, indirectly suggesting that the greatest focus of public health attention on CAs should be aimed at primary rather than secondary prevention.
尽管童年逆境(CA)与成人精神障碍之间的显著关联已被广泛记录,但CA与疾病发作和持续存在之间的关联尚未得到区分。这种区分在概念和实际应用方面都很重要。
在全国共病调查复制研究中,检验12种回顾性报告的童年逆境与成人精神疾病诊断与统计手册第四版(DSM-IV)疾病持续存在之间的多变量关联。
横断面社区调查。
美国家庭人口。
具有全国代表性的5692名成年人样本。
使用复合国际诊断访谈,对有这些疾病终生史的受访者的20种终生DSM-IV情绪、焦虑、破坏行为和物质使用障碍中的每一种,分别评估发作的近期情况。使用向后复发生存模型来检验持续性的预测因素,以预测自最近一次发作以来的时间,并控制发病年龄和发病以来的时间。
涉及适应不良家庭功能的童年逆境(父母精神疾病、物质使用障碍、犯罪、家庭暴力、身体和性虐待以及忽视)而非其他童年逆境,与情绪、物质滥用和焦虑障碍的持续存在显著但适度相关。适应不良家庭功能童年逆境的数量与相同结局具有统计学上显著但同样实质性适度的亚相加关联。暴露于多种其他童年逆境与情绪和焦虑障碍的持续存在显著相关。这些关联在整个生命过程中在统计学上仍然显著,尽管模拟显示在没有童年逆境的情况下,至最近一次发作时间的关联的实质性大小仅增加1.6%(从平均8.3年增加到平均8.4年)。
童年逆境与成人DSM-IV/复合国际诊断访谈疾病之间总体上具有统计学显著的关联,在很大程度上是由于与发病而非持续存在的组成关联,这间接表明公共卫生对童年逆境的最大关注重点应放在一级预防而非二级预防上。