Suffolk University, Department of Psychology, 73 Tremont St, Boston, MA 02108, United States of America; University of Washington, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, 1959 NE Pacific St, Seattle, WA 98195, United States of America; Seattle Children's Hospital, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Medicine, 4800 Sand Point Way NE, Seattle, WA 98105, United States of America.
Suffolk University, Department of Psychology, 73 Tremont St, Boston, MA 02108, United States of America.
Child Abuse Negl. 2022 May;127:105562. doi: 10.1016/j.chiabu.2022.105562. Epub 2022 Feb 23.
Adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) are a public health crisis, affecting nearly half of children in the United States. Long-term effects of ACEs on psychological well-being, engagement in risk behaviors, and physical health have been observed. Moreover, many individuals exposed to ACEs are also affected by an accumulation of stressors due to broader structural inequities.
The current study examined heterogeneity in patterns of ACEs, explored how these patterns varied based on race/ethnicity, biological sex, and socioeconomic status, and assessed how ACE patterns were associated with physical health, mental health, and risk-related outcomes in adulthood.
Drawing on the Add Health dataset, survey data from Waves I, III, IV (n = 12,288) were analyzed. Mean age of participants was 28.3 (SD = 1.9), more than half were female (54.4%), and a little less than half identified as youth of color (46.7%).
Multigroup latent class analysis explored heterogeneity in ACE exposure and variations based on structural inequities. Latent class regression assessed associations between ACE classes and outcomes.
A four-class solution was identified. Class sizes and latent structures differed by biological sex. Among males and females, the low adversity class had more positive physical health, mental health, and risk-related outcomes compared to all classes, while the childhood maltreatment and high adversity/community violence classes engaged in more risk-related behaviors. Very small to medium effects were observed.
Findings highlight the importance of examining heterogeneity in ACE exposure, and how patterns of ACEs may differentially affect outcomes in adulthood.
不良的儿童期经历(ACE)是公共卫生危机,影响了近一半的美国儿童。已经观察到 ACE 对心理幸福感、风险行为的参与以及身体健康的长期影响。此外,由于更广泛的结构性不平等,许多接触 ACE 的人也受到压力源积累的影响。
本研究考察了 ACE 模式的异质性,探讨了这些模式如何根据种族/民族、生物性别和社会经济地位而变化,并评估了 ACE 模式如何与成年后的身体健康、心理健康和风险相关结果相关联。
利用 Add Health 数据集,对来自 I 波、III 波和 IV 波(n=12288)的调查数据进行了分析。参与者的平均年龄为 28.3(SD=1.9),超过一半为女性(54.4%),略低于一半的人认为自己是有色人种青年(46.7%)。
多组潜在类别分析探索了 ACE 暴露的异质性以及基于结构性不平等的变化。潜在类别回归评估了 ACE 类别与结果之间的关联。
确定了一个四类别解决方案。类别大小和潜在结构因生物性别而异。在男性和女性中,低逆境类别的身体、心理和风险相关结果比所有类别都更积极,而童年虐待和高逆境/社区暴力类别的风险相关行为更多。观察到非常小到中等的效果。
研究结果强调了检查 ACE 暴露异质性的重要性,以及 ACE 模式如何可能对成年后的结果产生不同的影响。