Latham Rachel M, Arseneault Louise, Alexandrescu Bianca, Baldoza Saffron, Carter Alysha, Moffitt Terrie E, Newbury Joanne B, Fisher Helen L
King's College London, Social, Genetic and Developmental Psychiatry Centre, Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology and Neuroscience, 16 De Crespigny Park, London, SE5 8AF, UK.
ESRC Centre for Society and Mental Health, King's College London, London, UK.
Soc Psychiatry Psychiatr Epidemiol. 2022 Dec;57(12):2379-2391. doi: 10.1007/s00127-022-02343-6. Epub 2022 Aug 9.
Violence occurs at multiple ecological levels and can harm mental health. However, studies of adolescents' experience of violence have often ignored the community context of violence, and vice versa. We examined how personal experience of severe physical violence and living in areas with high levels of neighbourhood disorder during adolescence combine to associate with mental health at the transition to adulthood and which factors mitigate this.
Data were from the Environmental Risk Longitudinal Twin Study, a nationally representative birth cohort of 2232 British twins. Participants' experience of severe physical violence during adolescence and past-year symptoms of psychiatric disorder were assessed via interviews at age 18. Neighbourhood disorder was reported by residents when participants were aged 13-14. Potential protective factors of maternal warmth, sibling warmth, IQ, and family socio-economic status were assessed during childhood, and perceived social support at age 18.
Personal experience of severe physical violence during adolescence was associated with elevated odds of age-18 psychiatric disorder regardless of neighbourhood disorder exposure. Cumulative effects of exposure to both were evident for internalising and thought disorder, but not externalising disorder. For adolescents exposed to severe physical violence only, higher levels of perceived social support (including from family and friends) were associated with lower odds of psychiatric disorder. For those who also lived in areas with high neighbourhood disorder, only family support mitigated their risk.
Increasing support or boosting adolescents' perceptions of their existing support network may be effective in promoting their mental health following violence exposure.
暴力发生在多个生态层面,会损害心理健康。然而,关于青少年暴力经历的研究往往忽视了暴力发生的社区背景,反之亦然。我们研究了青少年时期严重身体暴力的个人经历与生活在邻里混乱程度高的地区如何共同影响成年转型期的心理健康,以及哪些因素可以减轻这种影响。
数据来自环境风险纵向双生子研究,这是一个具有全国代表性的包含2232对英国双胞胎的出生队列。通过18岁时的访谈评估参与者在青少年时期的严重身体暴力经历和过去一年的精神障碍症状。在参与者13 - 14岁时,由居民报告邻里混乱情况。在儿童时期评估母亲温暖、兄弟姐妹温暖、智商和家庭社会经济地位等潜在保护因素,以及18岁时感知到的社会支持。
无论是否接触邻里混乱,青少年时期严重身体暴力的个人经历都与18岁时精神障碍的几率升高有关。对于内化和思维障碍,两者接触的累积效应明显,但对于外化障碍则不然。对于仅遭受严重身体暴力的青少年,较高水平的感知社会支持(包括来自家人和朋友的支持)与较低的精神障碍几率相关。对于那些也生活在邻里混乱程度高的地区的青少年,只有家庭支持能减轻他们的风险。
增加支持或提高青少年对其现有支持网络的认知,可能有效地促进他们在遭受暴力后的心理健康。