Centre for Academic Mental Health, Population Health Sciences, University of Bristol Medical School, Bristol, UK.
Children and Young People's Mental Health Research Collaboration, University of Exeter Medical School, Exeter, UK.
Child Abuse Negl. 2024 Oct;156:107014. doi: 10.1016/j.chiabu.2024.107014. Epub 2024 Sep 4.
Adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) affect up to half the general population, they are known to co-occur, and are particularly common among those experiencing poverty. Yet, there are limited studies examining specific patterns of ACE co-occurrence considering their developmental timing.
To examine the longitudinal co-occurrence patterns of ACEs across childhood and adolescence, and to examine the role of poverty in predicting these.
The sample was 8859 children from the Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children, a longitudinal prospective population-based UK birth cohort.
Repeated measures of ten ACEs were available, occurring in early childhood (birth-5 years), mid-childhood (6-10 years), and adolescence (11-16 years). Latent class analysis was used to identify groups of children with similar developmental patterns of ACEs. Multinomial regression was used to examine the association between poverty during pregnancy and ACE classes.
Sixteen percent of parents experienced poverty. A five-class latent model was selected: "Low ACEs" (72·0 %), "Early and mid-childhood household disharmony" (10·6 %), "Persistent parental mental health problems" (9·7 %), "Early childhood abuse and parental mental health problems" (5·0 %), and "Mid-childhood and adolescence ACEs" (2·6 %). Poverty was associated with a higher likelihood of being in each of the ACE classes compared to the low ACEs reference class. The largest effect size was seen for the "Early and mid-childhood household disharmony" class (OR 4·70, 95 % CI 3·68-6·00).
A multifactorial approach to preventing ACEs is needed - including support for parents facing financial and material hardship, at-risk families, and timely interventions for those experiencing ACEs.
不良的儿童经历(ACEs)影响了多达一半的普通人群,已知它们会同时发生,而且在贫困人群中尤为常见。然而,考虑到其发展时间,很少有研究检查 ACE 共同发生的具体模式。
检查 ACEs 在儿童期和青春期的纵向共同发生模式,并研究贫困在预测这些模式中的作用。
该样本来自阿冯纵向研究父母和孩子,这是一项针对英国出生队列的纵向前瞻性基于人群的研究。
可获得十种 ACE 的重复测量数据,发生在儿童早期(出生至 5 岁)、中期(6-10 岁)和青春期(11-16 岁)。潜在类别分析用于识别具有相似 ACE 发展模式的儿童群体。使用多项回归检查怀孕期间贫困与 ACE 类别的关联。
16%的父母经历了贫困。选择了一个五类潜在模型:“低 ACEs”(72.0%)、“早期和中期家庭不和谐”(10.6%)、“持续的父母心理健康问题”(9.7%)、“儿童早期虐待和父母心理健康问题”(5.0%)和“中期和青春期 ACEs”(2.6%)。与低 ACEs 参考类相比,贫困与 ACE 类别的可能性更高相关。最大的效应大小见于“早期和中期家庭不和谐”类(OR 4.70,95%CI 3.68-6.00)。
需要采取多因素方法预防 ACEs——包括为面临财务和物质困难的父母、高危家庭以及那些经历 ACEs 的人提供支持,以及及时干预。