Adverse childhood experiences and mental health in young adults: a longitudinal survey
Connecticut Department of Public Health · University of Connecticut · +2 more institutions
Abstract
Adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) have been consistently linked to psychiatric difficulties in children and adults. However, the long-term effects of ACEs on mental health during the early adult years have been understudied. In addition, many studies are methodologically limited by use of non-representative samples, and few studies have investigated gender and racial differences. The current study relates self-reported lifetime exposure to a range of ACEs in a community sample of high school seniors to three mental health outcomes-depressive symptoms, drug abuse, and antisocial behavior-two years later during the transition to adulthood.
The study has a two-wave, prospective design. A systematic probability sample of high school seniors (N = 1093) was taken from communities of diverse socioeconomic status. They were interviewed in person in 1998 and over the telephone two years later. Gender and racial differences in ACE prevalence were tested with chi-square tests. Each mental health outcome was regressed on one ACE, controlling for gender, race/ethnicity, and SES to obtain partially standardized regression coefficients.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 21.76
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 57
Authors
3Topics & keywords
- Mental health
- Medicine
- Ethnic group
- Poison control
- Psychiatry
- Biostatistics
- Suicide prevention
- Injury prevention
- Good health and well-being