4.3 Article

Childhood Adversity and Midlife Health: Shining a Light on the Black Box of Psychosocial Mechanisms

Journal

PREVENTION SCIENCE
Volume 24, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER/PLENUM PUBLISHERS
DOI: 10.1007/s11121-022-01431-y

Keywords

Adverse childhood experiences; Stressful life events; Health behaviors; Personality; Health; Perceived stress

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Adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) are associated with poorer health in midlife, and psychosocial factors play an important role in this association. Stressful life events, perceived stress, negative emotionality, and health behaviors mediate the relationship between childhood ACEs and health outcomes in middle-aged adults. Public health efforts can focus on reducing stressful life events, negative emotionality, perceived stress, and improving health behaviors to mitigate the health consequences of ACEs.
Adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) are associated with poorer health, which has spurred public health efforts to reduce the number of adverse events children experience. Unfortunately, it is unlikely that all ACEs can be prevented. For adults who already experienced ACEs in childhood, what psychological, social, and behavioral intervention targets might reduce risk for negative health outcomes? To provide insight into the black box of psychosocial mechanisms linking ACEs to poor health, our study used data from the Dunedin Study, a longitudinal cohort assessed from birth to age 45. Mediation models (N = 859) were used to examine whether candidate psychosocial variables in adulthood explained the association between childhood ACEs and health in midlife. Potential psychosocial mediators included stressful life events, perceived stress, negative emotionality, and health behaviors. Children who experienced more ACEs had poorer health in midlife. They also had significantly more stressful life events, more perceived stress, more negative emotionality, and unhealthier behaviors as adults. These mediators were each independently associated with poorer health in midlife and statistically mediated the association between ACEs and midlife health. Health behaviors evidenced the strongest indirect effect from ACEs to midlife health. Together, these psychosocial mediators accounted for the association between ACEs in childhood and health three decades later. Public health efforts to mitigate the health consequences of ACEs could aim to reduce the stressful life events people experience, reduce negative emotionality, reduce perceived stress, or improve health behaviors among adults who experienced childhood adversity.

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