Howell Kathryn H, Miller-Graff Laura E, Martinez-Torteya Cecilia, Napier Taylor R, Carney Jessica R
Department of Psychology, University of Memphis, Memphis, TN 38152, USA.
Department of Psychology, University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, IN 46556, USA.
Children (Basel). 2021 Sep 24;8(10):844. doi: 10.3390/children8100844.
Early research on adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) provided staggering evidence of the significant ramifications of ACEs on physical health and functioning. It brought to the forefront the importance of addressing trauma and family dysfunction to enhance public health. Over the past several decades, the study of childhood adversity has blossomed, with expanded conceptualizations and assessments of ACEs. This review brings together various biological, psychological, and sociological principles that inform our understanding of ACEs and our approach to treatment. Specifically, we document the evolution of ACEs research, focusing on the intergenerational impact of ACEs, the importance of incorporating a resilience framework when examining ACEs, and implementing interventions that address adversity across generations and at multiple levels of the social ecology. Evidence is provided to support the evolving perspective that ACEs have long-lasting effects beyond the ACE(s)-exposed individual, with significant attention to the impact of parental ACEs on child development. An intergenerational and multilevel approach to understanding and addressing ACEs offers specific areas to target in interventions and in public policy.
早期关于童年不良经历(ACEs)的研究提供了惊人的证据,证明ACEs对身体健康和机能有着重大影响。它将应对创伤和家庭功能失调以促进公众健康的重要性推到了前沿。在过去几十年里,童年逆境的研究蓬勃发展,对ACEs的概念化和评估都有所扩展。本综述汇集了各种生物学、心理学和社会学原理,这些原理有助于我们理解ACEs以及我们的治疗方法。具体而言,我们记录了ACEs研究的演变,重点关注ACEs的代际影响、在研究ACEs时纳入复原力框架的重要性,以及实施跨越代际和社会生态多个层面应对逆境的干预措施。有证据支持这样一种不断演变的观点,即ACEs对受ACEs影响的个体之外的人也有长期影响,其中特别关注父母的ACEs对儿童发育的影响。一种理解和应对ACEs的代际和多层次方法为干预措施和公共政策提供了具体的目标领域。