Centre of Public Health Sciences, Faculty of Medicine, University of Iceland, Reykjavík, Iceland.
Department of Medical Epidemiology & Biostatistics, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden.
Elife. 2022 Feb 1;11:e71770. doi: 10.7554/eLife.71770.
Adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) have consistently been associated with elevated risk of multiple adverse health outcomes, yet their contribution to coping ability and psychiatric resilience in adulthood is unclear.
Cross-sectional data were derived from the ongoing Stress-And-Gene-Analysis cohort, representing 30% of the Icelandic nationwide female population, 18-69 years. Participants in the current study were 26,198 women with data on 13 ACEs measured with the ACE-International Questionnaire. Self-reported coping ability was measured with the Connor-Davidson Resilience Scale and psychiatric resilience was operationalized as absence of psychiatric morbidity. Generalized linear regression assuming normal or Poisson distribution were used to assess the associations of ACEs with coping ability and psychiatric resilience controlling for multiple confounders.
Number of ACEs was inversely associated with adult resilience in a dose-dependent manner; every 1SD unit increase in ACE scores was associated with both lower levels of coping ability ( = -0.14; 95% CI-0.15,-0.13) and lower psychiatric resilience ( = -0.28; 95% CI-0.29,-0.27) in adulthood. Compared to women with 0 ACEs, women with ≥5 ACEs had 36% lower prevalence of high coping ability (PR = 0.64, 95% CI 0.59,0.70) and 58% lower prevalence of high psychiatric resilience (PR = 0.42; 95% CI 0.39,0.45). Specific ACEs including emotional neglect, bullying, sexual abuse and mental illness of household member were consistently associated with reduced adult resilience. We observed only slightly attenuated associations after controlling for adult socioeconomic factors and social support in adulthood.
Cumulative ACE exposure is associated with lower adult resilience among women, independent of adult socioeconomic factors and social support, indicating that adult resilience may be largely determined in childhood.
This work was supported by the European Research Council (Consolidator grant; UAV, grant number 726413), and the Icelandic Center for Research (Grant of excellence; UAV, grant number 163362-051). HBD was supported by a doctoral grant from the University of Iceland Research Fund.
不良的童年经历(ACEs)一直与多种不良健康结果的风险增加相关,但它们对成年后的应对能力和精神弹性的贡献尚不清楚。
横断面数据来自正在进行的应激和基因分析队列,代表冰岛全国女性人口的 30%,年龄在 18-69 岁之间。本研究的参与者是 26198 名女性,她们使用 ACE-International 问卷测量了 13 项 ACE。自我报告的应对能力用 Connor-Davidson 韧性量表测量,精神弹性表现为没有精神疾病。采用正态或泊松分布的广义线性回归来评估 ACE 与应对能力和精神弹性的关联,同时控制了多个混杂因素。
ACE 数量与成年后的弹性呈负相关,呈剂量依赖性;ACE 评分每增加 1 个标准差单位,与应对能力降低( = -0.14;95%CI-0.15,-0.13)和成年后精神弹性降低( = -0.28;95%CI-0.29,-0.27)有关。与 ACE 为 0 的女性相比,ACE≥5 的女性具有较低的高应对能力(PR = 0.64,95%CI 0.59,0.70)和较低的高精神弹性(PR = 0.42;95%CI 0.39,0.45)的患病率。包括情感忽视、欺凌、性虐待和家庭成员的精神疾病在内的特定 ACE 与成人韧性降低有关。在控制成年后社会经济因素和社会支持后,我们观察到的关联略有减弱。
在女性中,累积 ACE 暴露与成年后弹性降低有关,独立于成年后的社会经济因素和社会支持,这表明成年后的弹性在很大程度上可能在儿童时期就已经确定。
这项工作得到了欧洲研究委员会(巩固者资助;UAV,资助号 726413)和冰岛研究中心(卓越资助;UAV,资助号 163362-051)的支持。HBD 得到了冰岛大学研究基金博士奖学金的支持。