Madigan Sheri, Wade Mark, Plamondon Andre, Maguire Jonathon L, Jenkins Jennifer M
Department of Psychology, University of Calgary, Calgary, Canada; Alberta Children's Hospital Research Institute, Calgary, Canada.
Department of Applied Psychology and Human Development, University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada.
J Pediatr. 2017 Aug;187:282-289.e1. doi: 10.1016/j.jpeds.2017.04.052. Epub 2017 May 23.
To assess the mechanisms accounting for the transfer of risk from one generation to the next, especially as they relate to maternal adverse childhood experiences and infant physical and emotional health outcomes.
Participants were 501 community mother-infant dyads recruited shortly after the birth and followed up at 18 months. Mothers retrospectively reported on their adverse childhood experiences. The main outcome measures were parent-reported infant physical health and emotional problems. Potential mechanisms of intergenerational transmission included cumulative biomedical risk (eg, prenatal and perinatal complications) and postnatal psychosocial risk (eg, maternal depression, single parenthood, marital conflict).
Four or more adverse childhood experiences were related to a 2- and 5-fold increased risk of experiencing any biomedical or psychosocial risk, respectively. There was a linear association between number of adverse childhood experiences and extent of biomedical and psychosocial risk. Path analysis revealed that the association between maternal adverse childhood experiences and infant physical health operated specifically through cumulative biomedical risk, while the relationship between adverse childhood experiences and infant emotional health operated specifically through cumulative psychosocial risk. This pattern was not explained by maternal childhood disadvantage or current neighborhood poverty.
Maternal adverse childhood experiences confer vulnerability to prenatal, perinatal, and postnatal psychosocial health. The association between adverse childhood experiences and offspring physical and emotional health operates through discrete intermediary mechanisms.
评估风险从一代传递至下一代的机制,尤其是与母亲童年不良经历以及婴儿身心健康结局相关的机制。
研究对象为501对社区母婴二元组,在婴儿出生后不久招募,并在18个月时进行随访。母亲们回顾性报告其童年不良经历。主要结局指标为家长报告的婴儿身体健康和情绪问题。代际传递的潜在机制包括累积生物医学风险(如产前和围产期并发症)和产后心理社会风险(如母亲抑郁、单亲家庭、婚姻冲突)。
四种或更多童年不良经历分别与经历任何生物医学或心理社会风险的风险增加2倍和5倍相关。童年不良经历的数量与生物医学和心理社会风险的程度之间存在线性关联。路径分析显示,母亲童年不良经历与婴儿身体健康之间的关联具体通过累积生物医学风险起作用,而童年不良经历与婴儿情绪健康之间的关系具体通过累积心理社会风险起作用。这种模式无法用母亲童年的劣势或当前邻里贫困来解释。
母亲童年不良经历使母亲易患产前、围产期和产后心理社会健康问题。童年不良经历与后代身心健康之间的关联通过不同的中介机制起作用。