Department of Psychological Science, University of California, Irvine, CA, USA.
Sue & Bill Gross School of Nursing, University of California, Irvine, CA, USA.
Trauma Violence Abuse. 2023 Jul;24(3):1677-1692. doi: 10.1177/15248380221074320. Epub 2022 Mar 4.
This systematic review explores the empirical literature addressing the association between parental preconception adversity and offspring physical health in African-American families. : We conducted a literature search in PubMed, Web of Science, PsycINFO, CINAHL, and Scopus through June 2021. Articles were included if they: reported data about at least two generations of African-American participants from the same family; measured parental preconception adversity at the individual level; measured at least one offspring physical health outcome; and examined associations between parental adversity and child health. : We identified 701 unique articles; thirty-eight articles representing 30 independent studies met inclusion criteria. Twenty-five studies (83%) reported that parental preconception adversity was associated with child health; six studies (20%) reported that parental preconception adversity was not associated with at least one offspring outcome; several studies reported both. Only six studies (20%) reported an association specific to African Americans. : Empirical evidence linking parental preconception adversity with offspring physical health in African Americans is limited and mixed. In the current literature, very few studies report evidence addressing intergenerational associations between parental preconception adversity and offspring physical health in the African-American population, specifically, and even fewer investigate forms of parental preconception adversity that have been shown to disproportionately affect African Americans (e.g., racism). To better understand root causes of racial health disparities, more rigorous systematic research is needed to address how intergenerational transmission of historical and ongoing race-based trauma may impact offspring health among African Americans.
本系统评价探讨了父母孕前逆境与非裔美国家庭后代身体健康之间关联的实证文献。我们在 2021 年 6 月前在 PubMed、Web of Science、PsycINFO、CINAHL 和 Scopus 上进行了文献检索。符合以下标准的文章被纳入:至少有两代来自同一家庭的非裔美国家庭参与者的数据;个体水平测量父母孕前逆境;测量至少一个后代身体健康结果;并检验父母逆境与儿童健康之间的关联。我们确定了 701 篇独特的文章;38 篇文章代表 30 项独立研究符合纳入标准。25 项研究(83%)报告说父母孕前逆境与儿童健康有关;6 项研究(20%)报告说父母孕前逆境与至少一个后代结果无关;一些研究报告了两者兼而有之。只有 6 项研究(20%)报告了特定于非裔美国人的关联。将父母孕前逆境与非裔美国人后代身体健康联系起来的实证证据有限且混杂。在当前的文献中,很少有研究报告证据表明父母孕前逆境与非裔美国人后代身体健康之间存在代际关联,特别是,几乎没有研究调查已经表明会不成比例地影响非裔美国人的父母孕前逆境形式(例如,种族主义)。为了更好地理解种族健康差异的根本原因,需要进行更严格的系统研究,以了解基于种族的历史和持续创伤的代际传递如何影响非裔美国人的后代健康。