Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston, MA.
Department of Epidemiology & Biostatistics, University of California San Francisco School of Medicine, San Francisco, CA.
Ann Behav Med. 2018 Jul 13;52(8):621-632. doi: 10.1093/abm/kax001.
Maintaining a healthy lifestyle in adulthood has been shown to significantly reduce cardiovascular disease risk. Increasing evidence suggests that behavioral risk factors for cardiovascular disease are established in childhood; however, limited research has evaluated whether childhood psychological factors play a role.
To evaluate the association between childhood psychological distress and young to mid adulthood healthy lifestyle.
Using prospective data from the 1958 British Birth Cohort, we assessed whether psychological distress in childhood (captured by internalizing and externalizing symptoms at ages 7, 11, and 16 years) predicted healthy lifestyle at ages 33 (N = 10,748) and 42 (N = 9,581) years. Healthy lifestyle was measured using an index previously demonstrated to predict cardiovascular disease, consisting of five components: absence of smoking, moderate alcohol consumption, regular physical activity, healthy diet, and ideal body weight.
Few participants (3.8% at age 33 years and 2.8% at age 42 years) endorsed all five healthy lifestyle components. Linear regression models, adjusting for potential child- and family-level confounders, revealed that higher distress levels in childhood were negatively associated with healthy lifestyle at age 33 years (β = -0.11, SE = 0.01, p < .001) and 42 years (β = -0.13, SE = 0.01, p < .001). Higher distress was also associated with significantly lower odds of endorsing each lifestyle component, except physical activity, at both ages. Additional analyses indicated that childhood distress levels were highest among those whose lifestyle scores were low at age 33 and further declined between ages 33 and 42.
Psychological distress in childhood may indicate children at risk of less healthy lifestyle practices later in life. Although our findings are preliminary, psychological distress may also provide an important target for public health interventions aimed at preventing cardiovascular disease.
在成年期保持健康的生活方式已被证明可显著降低心血管疾病的风险。越来越多的证据表明,心血管疾病的行为危险因素在儿童期就已确立;然而,有限的研究评估了儿童期心理因素是否发挥作用。
评估儿童期心理困扰与年轻到中年期健康生活方式之间的关系。
使用 1958 年英国出生队列的前瞻性数据,我们评估了儿童期的心理困扰(通过 7 岁、11 岁和 16 岁时的内化和外化症状来衡量)是否预测了 33 岁(N=10748)和 42 岁(N=9581)时的健康生活方式。健康的生活方式是通过以前证明可以预测心血管疾病的指数来衡量的,该指数由五个组成部分组成:不吸烟、适量饮酒、定期进行身体活动、健康饮食和理想体重。
很少有参与者(33 岁时有 3.8%,42 岁时有 2.8%)符合所有五个健康生活方式的组成部分。在调整了儿童和家庭层面的潜在混杂因素后,线性回归模型显示,儿童期较高的困扰水平与 33 岁时的健康生活方式(β=-0.11,SE=0.01,p<.001)和 42 岁时的健康生活方式呈负相关(β=-0.13,SE=0.01,p<.001)。较高的困扰也与在两个年龄段的每个生活方式组成部分的可能性显著降低相关,除了身体活动。进一步的分析表明,在 33 岁时生活方式评分较低且在 33 岁至 42 岁之间进一步下降的人群中,儿童期的困扰水平最高。
儿童期的心理困扰可能表明儿童在以后的生活中更容易采取不健康的生活方式。尽管我们的发现是初步的,但心理困扰也可能为旨在预防心血管疾病的公共卫生干预措施提供一个重要的目标。