Duke University.
Dev Psychopathol. 2013 Nov;25(4 Pt 2):1619-34. doi: 10.1017/S0954579413000801.
Many young people who are mistreated by an adult, victimized by bullies, criminally assaulted, or who witness domestic violence react to this violence exposure by developing behavioral, emotional, or learning problems. What is less well known is that adverse experiences like violence exposure can lead to hidden physical alterations inside a child's body, alterations that may have adverse effects on life-long health. We discuss why this is important for the field of developmental psychopathology and for society, and we recommend that stress-biology research and intervention science join forces to tackle the problem. We examine the evidence base in relation to stress-sensitive measures for the body (inflammatory reactions, telomere erosion, epigenetic methylation, and gene expression) and brain (mental disorders, neuroimaging, and neuropsychological testing). We also review promising interventions for families, couples, and children that have been designed to reduce the effects of childhood violence exposure. We invite intervention scientists and stress-biology researchers to collaborate in adding stress-biology measures to randomized clinical trials of interventions intended to reduce effects of violence exposure and other traumas on young people.
许多遭受成年人虐待、被欺凌、遭受刑事侵犯或目睹家庭暴力的年轻人,会因为这种暴力暴露而出现行为、情绪或学习问题。鲜为人知的是,类似暴力的不良经历会导致儿童体内隐藏的身体变化,这些变化可能对终身健康产生不利影响。我们讨论了为什么这对发展心理病理学领域和社会都很重要,我们建议压力生物学研究和干预科学联手解决这个问题。我们研究了与身体(炎症反应、端粒磨损、表观遗传甲基化和基因表达)和大脑(精神障碍、神经影像学和神经心理学测试)的应激敏感指标相关的证据基础。我们还回顾了针对家庭、夫妇和儿童的有前途的干预措施,这些措施旨在减少儿童暴力暴露的影响。我们邀请干预科学家和压力生物学研究人员合作,将压力生物学指标纳入旨在减少暴力暴露和其他创伤对年轻人影响的随机临床试验中。