Sanford Center for Biobehavioral Research, Fargo, ND, USA.
Division of Epidemiology and Community Health, School of Public Health, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN, USA.
Child Abuse Negl. 2021 Dec;122:105307. doi: 10.1016/j.chiabu.2021.105307. Epub 2021 Sep 4.
Adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) are associated with a range of health problems, yet protective factors such as self-compassion may help buffer these associations.
This study examined associations of distinct patterns of ACEs with depressive symptoms, body mass index (BMI), and disordered eating symptoms and investigated self-compassion as a potential protective factor.
Data from a diverse sample of 1440 emerging adults (M = 22.2 years; 53.7% female; 80.3% with race/ethnicity other than non-Hispanic white) came from the population-based EAT 2018 (Eating and Activity over Time) study.
Seven types of ACEs were retrospectively self-reported and used as model indicators in latent class analysis to identify patterns of ACEs. Self-compassion, depressive symptoms, height and weight (to calculate BMI), and disordered eating symptoms were also assessed. Demographic-adjusted regression models were conducted.
Three latent classes emerged: "low ACEs" (66.5% of the sample), "household dysfunction" (24.3%), and "household dysfunction and abuse" (9.1%). Compared to participants in the "low ACEs" class, participants in either latent class involving household dysfunction demonstrated higher levels of depressive and disordered eating symptoms. Participants in the "household dysfunction and abuse" class also had higher BMI. Associations differed by self-compassion for depressive symptoms (p = 0.01), BMI (p = 0.03), and disordered eating symptoms (p = 0.005), such that associations for latent classes characterized by ACEs were weaker with higher levels of self-compassion.
These findings suggest self-compassion may act as a buffer against adverse mood-, weight-, and eating-related outcomes in the face of adversity and therefore may be an important intervention target.
不良的童年经历(ACEs)与一系列健康问题相关,但自我同情等保护因素可能有助于缓冲这些关联。
本研究探讨了不同类型的 ACEs 与抑郁症状、体重指数(BMI)和饮食失调症状的关联,并研究了自我同情作为潜在保护因素的作用。
来自基于人群的 EAT 2018(饮食和活动随时间变化)研究的 1440 名新兴成年人(M=22.2 岁;53.7%为女性;80.3%的种族/民族非非西班牙裔白人)的数据。
采用回顾性自我报告的方法报告了七种类型的 ACEs,并将其用作潜在类别分析中的模型指标,以确定 ACEs 的模式。还评估了自我同情、抑郁症状、身高和体重(计算 BMI)以及饮食失调症状。进行了调整人口统计学因素的回归模型。
三个潜在类别出现:“低 ACEs”(样本的 66.5%)、“家庭功能障碍”(24.3%)和“家庭功能障碍和虐待”(9.1%)。与“低 ACEs”类别的参与者相比,家庭功能障碍类别的任何一个参与者都表现出更高水平的抑郁和饮食失调症状。“家庭功能障碍和虐待”类别的参与者 BMI 也更高。自我同情对抑郁症状(p=0.01)、BMI(p=0.03)和饮食失调症状(p=0.005)的关联存在差异,表明 ACEs 特征的潜在类别与自我同情水平较高的关联较弱。
这些发现表明,自我同情可能在面临逆境时作为缓冲,减轻不良情绪、体重和饮食相关的结果,因此可能是一个重要的干预目标。