Population Research Unit, Faculty of Social Sciences, University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland
Population Research Unit, Faculty of Social Sciences, University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland.
J Epidemiol Community Health. 2019 Nov;73(11):1040-1046. doi: 10.1136/jech-2019-212689. Epub 2019 Aug 20.
Previous studies suggest that childhood experience of parental adversities increases the risk of subsequent offspring self-harm, but studies on distinct paternal and maternal characteristics are few and it remains unclear how these interact with childhood social position. The study aims to assess whether paternal and maternal adversities have different associations with offspring self-harm in adolescence and young adulthood. Interaction by offspring gender and childhood income are investigated, as well as cumulative effects of multiple adversities.
The study uses administrative register data on a 20% random sample of Finnish households with children aged 0-14 years in 2000. We follow children born in 1986-1998 (n=155 855) from their 13th birthday until 2011. Parental substance abuse, psychiatric disorders, criminality and hospitalisations due to interpersonal violence or self-harm are used to predict offspring self-harm with Cox proportional hazards models.
The results show a clear increase in the risk of self-harm among those exposed to maternal or paternal adversities with HRs between 1.5 and 5.4 among boys and 1.7 and 3.9 among girls. The excess risks hold for every measure of maternal and paternal adversities after adjusting for childhood income and parental education. Evidence was found suggesting that low income, accumulation of adversity and female gender may exacerbate the consequences of adversities.
Our findings suggest that both parents' adversities increase the risk of self-harm and that multiple experiences of parental adversities in childhood are especially harmful, regardless of parent gender. Higher levels of childhood income can protect from the negative consequences of adverse experiences.
先前的研究表明,儿童时期经历父母逆境会增加后代自残的风险,但关于不同的父性和母性特征的研究较少,而且这些特征如何与儿童时期的社会地位相互作用仍不清楚。本研究旨在评估父性和母性逆境与青少年和青年期后代自残的关联是否存在差异。研究调查了后代性别和儿童时期收入的相互作用,以及多种逆境的累积效应。
本研究使用了芬兰行政登记数据,对 2000 年有 0-14 岁儿童的 20%随机家庭样本进行了研究。我们从 1986-1998 年出生的儿童(n=155855)13 岁生日开始随访,直到 2011 年。使用父母滥用药物、精神障碍、犯罪以及因人际暴力或自残而住院的情况,通过 Cox 比例风险模型预测后代自残。
研究结果表明,暴露于母性或父性逆境中的个体自残风险明显增加,男孩的 HR 介于 1.5 至 5.4 之间,女孩的 HR 介于 1.7 至 3.9 之间。在调整儿童时期收入和父母教育程度后,这些风险仍然存在于每一种母性和父性逆境的衡量指标中。有证据表明,低收入、逆境积累和女性性别可能会加剧逆境的后果。
我们的研究结果表明,父母双方的逆境都会增加自残的风险,而且童年时期经历多种父母逆境尤其有害,无论父母的性别如何。较高的儿童时期收入水平可以保护免受不利经历的负面影响。