4.6 Article

CHILDHOOD MALTREATMENT AND THE COURSE OF DEPRESSIVE AND ANXIETY DISORDERS: THE CONTRIBUTION OF PERSONALITY CHARACTERISTICS

期刊

DEPRESSION AND ANXIETY
卷 33, 期 1, 页码 27-34

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/da.22429

关键词

childhood maltreatment; depressive disorders; anxiety disorders

资金

  1. Geestkracht program of Zon-MW [10-000-1002]
  2. VU University Medical Center
  3. GGZ Rivierduinen
  4. University Medical Center Groningen
  5. Lentis
  6. GGZ Friesland
  7. GGZ Drenthe
  8. Scientific Institute for Quality of Healthcare (IQ Healthcare)
  9. Netherlands Institute for Health Services Research (NIVEL)
  10. Netherlands Institute of Mental Health and Addiction (Trimbos)

向作者/读者索取更多资源

BackgroundWe investigated the effect of childhood maltreatment on predicting the 4-year course of depressive and anxiety disorders and the possible mediating role of personality characteristics in the association between childhood maltreatment and illness course.MethodsLongitudinal data in a large sample of participants with baseline depressive and/or anxiety disorders (n = 1,474, 18-65 years) were collected in the Netherlands Study of Depression and Anxiety. At baseline, childhood maltreatment was assessed with a semistructured interview. Personality trait questionnaires (Neuroticism-Extroversion-Openness Five Factor Inventory, Mastery scale, and Leiden Index of Depression Sensitivity), recent stressful life events (List of Threatening Experiences Questionnaire), and psychosocial variables were administered. The Life Chart Interview was used to determine the time to remission of depressive and/or anxiety disorders.ResultsAt baseline, 846 participants (57.4%) reported any childhood maltreatment. Childhood maltreatment had a negative impact on psychosocial functioning and was predictive of more unfavorable personality characteristics and cognitive reactivity styles (P < 0.001). Childhood maltreatment was a significant predictor of lower likelihood of remission of depressive and/or anxiety disorders (HR = 0.94, P < 0.001). High levels of neuroticism, hopelessness, external locus of control, and low levels of extraversion were mediating the relationship between childhood maltreatment and 4-year remission of depressive and anxiety disorders.ConclusionsCertain personality characteristics are key players in the mechanism linking childhood maltreatment to an adverse illness course of depressive and anxiety disorders. Early interventionsreducing neuroticism and hopelessness, and enhancing extraversion and locus of controlmight contribute to a better prognosis in a high-risk group of depressive and anxiety disorders.

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