Division of Health Policy and Management, University of Minnesota School of Public Health, Minneapolis, MN, USA.
Department of Health Management and Policy, Drexel University Dornsife School of Public Health, Philadelphia, PA, USA.
Prev Med. 2022 Jan;154:106912. doi: 10.1016/j.ypmed.2021.106912. Epub 2021 Dec 16.
While clinical and public health researchers have produced a high volume of research evidence about the consequences of ACEs, there is limited research on public understanding of ACEs or how to most effectively communicate about this body of science. The objective of this study was to determine which messages describing evidence about the consequences of adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) affect public perceptions. We conducted an online experiment with a nationally-representative sample of U.S. adults in July-August 2020. Participants were randomized to control groups receiving messages describing ACE prevalence or resilience, or treatment groups receiving messages describing consequences of ACEs on mental health and substance use, economics, racial equity, or biology. We compared respondents' perceptions of prevention policies and likelihood of policy engagement, attributions of multi-sector responsibility, and blame and stigma across experimental groups. Messages about economic consequences increased respondents' support for policy and attributions of multi-sector responsibility relative to control groups, while also increasing parental blame. The message describing racial equity lowered respondents' perceptions of importance of state policy action and attributions of responsibility to health care. None of the messages affected stigmatizing attitudes. Describing the economic consequences of ACEs on public systems boosts public support for policy action. More research is needed on how the public responds to messaging connecting systemic racism with childhood adversity and health.
虽然临床和公共卫生研究人员已经就 ACE 后果的相关研究产生了大量证据,但对于公众对 ACE 的理解或如何最有效地传播这方面的科学知识的研究却很有限。本研究的目的是确定描述不良儿童经历(ACE)后果的证据中哪些信息会影响公众的看法。我们在 2020 年 7 月至 8 月期间,对美国成年人进行了一项全国代表性的在线实验。参与者被随机分配到对照组,接受描述 ACE 流行率或韧性的信息,或治疗组,接受描述 ACE 对心理健康和药物使用、经济、种族公平或生物学影响的信息。我们比较了受访者对预防政策的看法和参与政策的可能性、多部门责任的归因、以及各实验组的指责和耻辱感。与对照组相比,描述经济后果的信息增加了受访者对政策的支持和对多部门责任的归因,同时也增加了对父母的指责。描述种族公平的信息降低了受访者对州政策行动的重要性和对医疗保健责任的看法。没有任何信息影响污名化态度。描述 ACE 对公共系统的经济后果会增强公众对政策行动的支持。需要更多研究公众对将系统性种族主义与儿童逆境和健康联系起来的信息的反应。