School of Social and Political Science, University of Edinburgh, Chrystal Macmillan Building, 15a George Square, Edinburgh, EH8 9LD, UK.
Department of Psychology, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UK.
Syst Rev. 2023 Sep 30;12(1):181. doi: 10.1186/s13643-023-02330-1.
Research cites a strong, dose-response relationship between adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) and poor adult mental health outcomes including anxiety, depression, post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), self-harm, suicidality, and psychotic-like experiences.
To systematically investigate the existence and strength of association between ACEs and adult mental health outcomes in prospective longitudinal studies. The review will focus on the outcomes: anxiety, depression, PTSD, self-harm, suicidal ideation, and psychotic-like experiences.
Twelve electronic databases will be searched: Embase, PsycINFO, MEDLINE, and Global Health through the OVID interface. ProQuest will be used to search Public Affairs Information Service (PAIS), Dissertations and Theses, Sociology Database (including Sociological Abstracts and Social Services Abstracts), PTSDpubs (formerly The Published International Literature on Traumatic Stress (PILOTS) Database) and Applied Social Sciences Index and Abstracts (ASSIA). CINAHL, World Health Organisation (WHO) Global Index Medicus, and WHO Violence Info will also be searched. Eligible studies will be double screened, assessed, and their data will be extracted. Any disagreement throughout these processes will be settled by a third reviewer. If enough studies meet the criteria and the methodological quality of each study is sufficient, a meta-analysis will be conducted.
A narrative synthesis of included studies and the associations between ACEs and adult mental health will be completed. If the number of studies included per mental health outcome is two or more, a multi-level meta-analysis will be completed using odds ratio effect sizes as outcomes.
This review will contribute to the existing body of literature supporting the long-term effects of ACEs on adult mental health. This review adds to previous reviews that have either synthesised cross-sectional associations between ACEs and mental health outcomes, synthesised longitudinal studies exploring the effect of ACEs on different physical and mental health outcomes or synthesised longitudinal studies exploring the effect of ACEs on the same mental health outcomes using different methods. This review aims to identify methodological weaknesses and knowledge gaps in current literature that can be addressed in future primary studies.
This protocol has been registered in PROSPERO (CRD42021297882).
研究表明,不良童年经历(ACEs)与成年人心理健康结果之间存在强烈的剂量反应关系,包括焦虑、抑郁、创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)、自残、自杀意念和类精神病体验。
系统调查前瞻性纵向研究中 ACEs 与成年人心理健康结果之间存在的关联及其强度。本综述将重点关注以下结果:焦虑、抑郁、PTSD、自残、自杀意念和类精神病体验。
将对 12 个电子数据库进行检索:Embase、PsycINFO、MEDLINE 和 OVID 接口下的全球健康数据库。ProQuest 将用于搜索公共事务信息服务(PAIS)、论文和学位论文、社会学数据库(包括社会学摘要和社会服务摘要)、PTSDpubs(前身为国际创伤应激发布文献(PILOTS)数据库)和应用社会科学索引和摘要(ASSIA)。还将检索 CINAHL、世界卫生组织(WHO)全球医学索引和 WHO 暴力信息。符合条件的研究将进行双盲筛选、评估,并提取其数据。如果在整个过程中出现任何分歧,将由第三位评审员解决。如果有足够的研究符合标准,并且每项研究的方法学质量都足够,将进行荟萃分析。
将对纳入的研究进行叙述性综合,并完成 ACEs 与成年人心理健康之间的关联。如果每个心理健康结果的纳入研究数量为两个或更多,则将使用比值比效应大小作为结果进行多层次荟萃分析。
本综述将有助于现有的文献支持 ACEs 对成年人心理健康的长期影响。本综述补充了以前的综述,这些综述要么综合了 ACEs 与心理健康结果之间的横断面关联,要么综合了探索 ACEs 对不同身体和心理健康结果的影响的纵向研究,要么综合了使用不同方法探索 ACEs 对相同心理健康结果的影响的纵向研究。本综述旨在确定当前文献中存在的方法学弱点和知识空白,以便在未来的初级研究中加以解决。
本方案已在 PROSPERO(CRD42021297882)中注册。