Department of Psychology, University of Bath, UK.
Department of Pharmacy and Pharmacology, University of Bath, UK.
Br J Health Psychol. 2019 May;24(2):282-297. doi: 10.1111/bjhp.12353. Epub 2019 Jan 13.
To assess the interplay of prior life stress and characteristics of resilience in determining how children cope with potentially stressful situations, using a two-phase study that triangulates parent-child dyadic interview data with subsequent experience of an acute laboratory stressor in 7-11-year-olds.
Participants (n = 34) were designated as being in one of four groups based on high/low levels of prior stress experience and high/low resilience ratings assessed during at-home interviews and from questionnaires measuring recent life events, hassles, and trait coping. During a subsequent laboratory stress protocol, salivary cortisol and heart rate were monitored, and a verbal subjective report was provided.
Salivary cortisol showed a significant increase in anticipation of the stress test, heart rate increased during the test, and children self-reported the task as stressful. Males displayed higher levels of cortisol than females in the anticipatory period. We observed no increase in salivary cortisol in response to the stress testing phase. Using the stress/resilience categorization, children with a higher level of resilience were differentiated by cortisol level in anticipation of the acute stress experiment based on their level of prior life stress. Highly resilient children with greater experience of prior life stress showed a lower anticipatory cortisol response than highly resilient children with less experience of prior life stress.
This study highlights the relevance of contextual factors, such as prior stress experience and resilience, in physiological response to the anticipation of acute stress and has implications for understanding how children cope with stressful experiences. Statement of contribution What is already known on this subject? An adaptation to the stress testing paradigm, the Bath Experimental Stress Test for Children (BEST-C) was found to reliably induce a salivary cortisol response in young children, suggesting that peer matching the audience was an effective modification to laboratory social stress testing. Recent work focusing on early life adversity has seen the emergence of prior stress experience and resilience as key factors in the examination of acute stress responses. However, much of the research regarding the impact of childhood stress is ambiguous; some research suggests that if children have experienced prior stressful life events this will enact a positive effect on stress responses and lead to resilience, and other research suggested that it will have a compounding negative effect. What does the study add? Findings provide support for the capacity of the BEST-C to induce an anticipation stress response in children. Contextual factors e.g., prior stress experience and resilience are key for understanding stress responses. Resilient children with more experience of stress show lower cortisol than those with less stress experience.
通过一项两阶段研究,使用亲子对偶访谈数据与 7-11 岁儿童随后经历急性实验室应激源相结合,评估先前生活应激与弹性特征的相互作用如何影响儿童应对潜在应激情境。
根据在家中访谈期间评估的高/低先前应激体验水平和高/低弹性评分,以及测量近期生活事件、困扰和特质应对的问卷,将参与者(n=34)分为四组之一。在随后的实验室应激方案中,监测唾液皮质醇和心率,并提供口头主观报告。
唾液皮质醇在应激测试前显著增加,心率在测试期间增加,儿童自我报告任务有压力。男性在预期期的皮质醇水平高于女性。我们没有观察到皮质醇在应激测试阶段的反应增加。使用应激/弹性分类,根据先前生活应激的水平,具有较高弹性的儿童在急性应激实验前的皮质醇水平上有所区分。经历较多先前生活应激的高弹性儿童的预期皮质醇反应低于经历较少先前生活应激的高弹性儿童。
这项研究强调了情境因素(如先前的生活应激和弹性)在儿童对急性应激的预期中的重要性,并对理解儿童如何应对压力体验具有启示意义。