Helen Bader School of Social Welfare, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Institute for Child and Family Well-being, United States.
Helen Bader School of Social Welfare, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Institute for Child and Family Well-being, United States.
Soc Sci Med. 2018 Jun;206:14-21. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2018.03.043. Epub 2018 Apr 14.
It is well established that exposure to a greater number of adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) increases the risk of poor physical and mental health outcomes. Given the predictive validity of ACE scores and other cumulative risk metrics, a similar measurement approach may advance the study of risk in adulthood.
We examined the prevalence and interrelations of 10 adverse adult experiences, including household events such as intimate partner violence and extrafamilial events such as crime victimization. We also tested the relation between cumulative adult adversity and later mental health problems, and we examined whether adult adversity mediates the link between childhood adversity and mental health.
Data were collected from 501 women in the Families and Children Thriving Study, a longitudinal investigation of low-income families that received home visiting services in Wisconsin. We conducted correlation analyses to assess interrelations among study measures along with multivariate analyses to test the effects of childhood and adult adversity on three outcomes: depression, anxiety, and posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). We then fit a structural equation model to test whether the effects of childhood adversity on mental health are mediated by adult adversity.
Over 80% of participants endorsed at least one adverse adult experience. Adult adversities correlated with each other and with the mental health outcomes. Controlling for ACEs and model covariates, adult adversity scores were positively associated with depression, anxiety, and PTSD scores. Path analyses revealed that the ACE-mental health connection was mediated by adult adversity.
Our findings indicate that mental health problems may be better understood by accounting for processes through which early adversity leads to later adversity. Pending replication, this line of research has the potential to improve the identification of populations that are at risk of poor health outcomes.
大量研究证实,经历更多不良童年经历(ACEs)会增加身心健康不良结局的风险。鉴于 ACE 评分和其他累积风险指标的预测效度,类似的测量方法可能会促进成年期风险的研究。
我们研究了 10 种不良成年经历的流行率和相互关系,包括家庭事件,如亲密伴侣暴力和家庭外事件,如犯罪受害。我们还检验了累积成年逆境与后期心理健康问题之间的关系,并研究了成年逆境是否在童年逆境与心理健康之间起中介作用。
数据来自威斯康星州接受家庭探访服务的低收入家庭的 Families and Children Thriving 纵向研究中的 501 名女性。我们进行了相关分析,以评估研究措施之间的相互关系,以及多元分析,以检验童年和成年逆境对三个结果的影响:抑郁、焦虑和创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)。然后,我们拟合结构方程模型,以检验童年逆境对心理健康的影响是否由成年逆境介导。
超过 80%的参与者至少经历过一种不良成年经历。成年逆境相互关联,并与心理健康结果相关。在控制 ACE 和模型协变量后,成年逆境评分与抑郁、焦虑和 PTSD 评分呈正相关。路径分析显示,ACE-心理健康的联系是由成年逆境介导的。
我们的研究结果表明,通过考虑早期逆境导致后期逆境的过程,可能会更好地理解心理健康问题。在等待复制的情况下,这一研究方向有可能提高识别处于不良健康结局风险中的人群的能力。