Divisions of Hospital Medicine,
Department of Pediatrics, University of Cincinnati College of Medicine, Cincinnati, Ohio; and.
Pediatrics. 2018 Apr;141(4). doi: 10.1542/peds.2017-2127.
Adults with a history of adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) (eg, abuse) have suboptimal health outcomes. Resilience may blunt this effect. The effect of parental ACEs (and resilience) on coping with challenges involving their children (eg, hospitalization) is unclear. We sought to quantify ACE and resilience scores for parents of hospitalized children and evaluate their associations to parental coping after discharge.
We conducted a prospective cohort study at a children's hospital (August 2015-May 2016). Eligible participants were English-speaking parents of children hospitalized on the Hospital Medicine or Complex Services team. The ACE questionnaire measured the responding parent's past adversity (ACE range: 0-10; ≥4 ACEs = high adversity). The Brief Resilience Scale (BRS) was used to measure their resilience (range: 1-5; higher is better). The primary outcome was measured by using the Post-Discharge Coping Difficulty Scale via a phone call 14 days post-discharge (range: 0-100; higher is worse). Associations were assessed by using multivariable linear regression, adjusting for parent- and patient-level covariates.
A total of 671 (81% of eligible parents) responded. Respondents were primarily women (90%), employed (66%), and had at least a high school degree (65%); 60% of children were white, 54% were publicly insured. Sixty-four percent of parents reported ≥1 ACE; 19% had ≥4 ACEs. The mean Brief Resilience Scale score for parents was 3.95. In adjusted analyses, higher ACEs and lower resilience were significantly associated with more difficulty coping after discharge.
More parental adversity and less resilience are associated with parental coping difficulties after discharge, representing potentially important levers for transition-focused interventions.
有不良童年经历(ACEs)(例如,虐待)的成年人健康状况不佳。适应力可能会削弱这种影响。父母 ACEs(和适应力)对应对其子女面临的挑战(例如,住院)的影响尚不清楚。我们试图量化住院儿童父母的 ACE 和适应力评分,并评估他们在出院后应对的相关性。
我们在一家儿童医院进行了一项前瞻性队列研究(2015 年 8 月至 2016 年 5 月)。符合条件的参与者是在医院内科或复杂服务团队住院的儿童的英语家长。ACE 问卷衡量了回应家长过去的逆境(ACE 范围:0-10;≥4 ACEs=高逆境)。使用简短的适应力量表(BRS)来衡量他们的适应力(范围:1-5;越高越好)。主要结果通过出院后 14 天的电话使用出院后应对困难量表来衡量(范围:0-100;越高越差)。通过多变量线性回归,调整了父母和患者层面的协变量,评估了相关性。
共有 671 名(合格父母的 81%)回应。受访者主要是女性(90%)、有工作(66%)且至少有高中学历(65%);60%的孩子是白人,54%的人有公共保险。64%的父母报告有≥1 ACE;19%的父母有≥4 ACEs。父母的平均简短适应力量表得分为 3.95。在调整分析中,更高的 ACEs 和更低的适应力与出院后应对困难显著相关。
更多的父母逆境和更低的适应力与出院后父母的应对困难有关,这代表了以过渡为重点的干预措施的潜在重要手段。