Stock Sarah E, Lacey Rebecca E, Arseneault Louise, Caspi Avshalom, Crush Eloise, Danese Andrea, Latham Rachel M, Moffitt Terrie E, Newbury Joanne B, Schaefer Jonathan D, Fisher Helen L, Baldwin Jessie R
Research Department of Epidemiology and Public Health, University College London, London, UK.
School of Health and Medical Sciences, City St George's, University of London, London, UK.
J Child Psychol Psychiatry. 2025 May;66(5):650-658. doi: 10.1111/jcpp.14070. Epub 2024 Nov 12.
Adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) are associated with mental health problems, but many children who experience ACEs do not develop such difficulties. A warm and supportive adult presence in childhood is associated with a lower likelihood of developing mental health problems after exposure to ACEs. However, it is unclear whether this association is causal, as previous research has not accounted for genetic and environmental confounding.
We used the twin-difference design to strengthen causal inference about whether a warm and supportive adult presence protects children exposed to ACEs from mental health problems. Participants were from the Environmental Risk (E-Risk) Longitudinal Twin Study, a UK population-representative birth cohort of 2,232 same-sex twins. ACEs were measured prospectively from ages 5 to 12. Maternal warmth was assessed at ages 5 and 10 through maternal speech samples. Adult support was assessed through child reports at age 12. Mental health problems were assessed through interviews at age 12 with parents and teachers and participants at age 18.
Among children exposed to ACEs, those who experienced greater maternal warmth and adult support had lower levels of mental health problems at ages 12 and 18. In monozygotic twin-difference analyses, the protective effects of maternal warmth and adult support on mental health were attenuated by 70% for maternal warmth and 81% for adult support, compared to phenotypic analyses. Twins who experienced greater maternal warmth and adult support had minimal or no difference in mental health compared to their co-twins, concordant for ACE exposure.
The apparent protective effect of a warm, supportive adult against mental health problems following ACEs is largely explained by genetic and environmental confounding. This suggests that interventions which boost maternal warmth and adult support should be supplemented by components addressing wider family environments and heritable vulnerabilities in children exposed to adversity, to improve mental health.
童年不良经历(ACEs)与心理健康问题相关,但许多经历过ACEs的儿童并未出现此类困难。童年时期有温暖且给予支持的成年人陪伴,与接触ACEs后出现心理健康问题的可能性较低相关。然而,这种关联是否具有因果关系尚不清楚,因为先前的研究未考虑到基因和环境混杂因素。
我们采用双胞胎差异设计,以加强关于温暖且给予支持的成年人陪伴是否能保护接触ACEs的儿童免受心理健康问题影响的因果推断。参与者来自环境风险(E-Risk)纵向双胞胎研究,这是一个具有英国人口代表性的出生队列,包含2232对同性双胞胎。ACEs从5岁到12岁进行前瞻性测量。通过母亲的言语样本在5岁和10岁时评估母亲的温暖程度。通过12岁儿童的报告评估成年人的支持。通过在12岁时与父母、教师访谈以及在18岁时与参与者访谈来评估心理健康问题。
在接触ACEs的儿童中,那些感受到更多母亲温暖和成年人支持的儿童在12岁和18岁时心理健康问题水平较低。在同卵双胞胎差异分析中,与表型分析相比,母亲温暖对心理健康的保护作用减弱了70%,成年人支持减弱了81%。与接触ACEs情况一致的同卵双胞胎相比,感受到更多母亲温暖和成年人支持的双胞胎在心理健康方面差异极小或没有差异。
ACEs后温暖、给予支持的成年人对心理健康问题的明显保护作用在很大程度上可由基因和环境混杂因素来解释。这表明,为改善心理健康,增强母亲温暖和成年人支持的干预措施应辅以解决更广泛家庭环境以及接触逆境儿童的遗传易感性问题的内容。