Gondek Dawid, Feder Gene, Howe Laura D, Gilbert Ruth, Howarth Emma, Deighton Jessica, Lacey Rebecca E
UCL Great Ormond Street Institute of Child Health London UK.
Department of Population Health Sciences University of Bristol Bristol UK.
JCPP Adv. 2023 Jan 25;3(1):e12134. doi: 10.1002/jcv2.12134. eCollection 2023 Mar.
Preventing parental intimate partner violence (IPV) or mitigating its negative effects early in the lifecourse is likely to improve population mental health. However, prevention of IPV is highly challenging and we know very little about how the mental health of children exposed to IPV can be improved. This study assessed the extent to which positive experiences were associated with depressive symptoms among children with and without experience of IPV.
This study used data from the Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children, a population-based birth cohort. After excluding those without information on depressive symptoms at age 18, the final sample comprised 4490 participants. Parental intimate partner violence (physical or emotional cruelty reported by mother or partner) when the cohort child was aged 2-9 years. Depressive symptoms were measured with the Short Mood and Feelings Questionnaire (SMFQ) at age 18 years.
Each additional report of parental intimate partner violence (over six reports) was associated with 0.047 (95% CI 0.027-0.066), or 4.7%, higher SMFQ score. Conversely, each additional positive experience (over 11 domains) was linked with -0.042 (95% CI -0.060 to -0.025) or 4.1%, lower SMFQ score. Among those with parental intimate partner violence (19.6% of participants), relationship with peers (effect size = 3.5%), school enjoyment (effect size = 1.2%), neighbourhood safety and cohesion (effect size = 1.8%) were associated with lower levels of depressive symptoms.
Most positive experiences were linked with lower levels of depressive symptoms regardless of parental intimate partner violence exposure. However, among those with parental IPV, this association was found only for relationships with peers, school enjoyment, neighbourhood safety and cohesion on depressive symptoms. If our findings are assumed to be causal, nurturing these factors may mitigate the harmful effects of parental intimate partner violence on depressive symptoms in adolescence.
预防父母亲密伴侣暴力(IPV)或在生命早期减轻其负面影响可能会改善人群心理健康。然而,预防IPV极具挑战性,我们对如何改善遭受IPV儿童的心理健康知之甚少。本研究评估了积极经历与有和没有IPV经历的儿童抑郁症状之间的关联程度。
本研究使用了来自雅芳亲子纵向研究的数据,这是一个基于人群的出生队列。在排除18岁时没有抑郁症状信息的人之后,最终样本包括4490名参与者。队列儿童2 - 9岁时父母的亲密伴侣暴力(母亲或伴侣报告的身体或情感虐待)。18岁时用简短情绪和感受问卷(SMFQ)测量抑郁症状。
父母亲密伴侣暴力的每增加一份报告(超过六份报告)与SMFQ得分高出0.047(95%可信区间0.027 - 0.066),即4.7%相关。相反,每增加一次积极经历(超过11个领域)与SMFQ得分低0.042(95%可信区间 - 0.060至 - 0.025),即4.1%相关。在有父母亲密伴侣暴力的人群中(占参与者的19.6%),与同伴的关系(效应大小 = 3.5%)、学校乐趣(效应大小 = 1.2%)、邻里安全与凝聚力(效应大小 = 1.8%)与较低水平的抑郁症状相关。
无论是否暴露于父母亲密伴侣暴力,大多数积极经历都与较低水平的抑郁症状相关。然而,在有父母IPV的人群中,这种关联仅在与同伴的关系、学校乐趣、邻里安全与凝聚力对抑郁症状方面被发现。如果假设我们的发现具有因果关系,培养这些因素可能会减轻父母亲密伴侣暴力对青少年抑郁症状的有害影响。