Agreement Between Prospective and Retrospective Measures of Childhood Maltreatment
King's College London · Duke University · +2 more institutions
Abstract
Childhood maltreatment is associated with mental illness. Researchers, clinicians, and public health professionals use prospective or retrospective measures interchangeably to assess childhood maltreatment, assuming that the 2 measures identify the same individuals. However, this assumption has not been comprehensively tested.
To meta-analyze the agreement between prospective and retrospective measures of childhood maltreatment. Data Sources: MEDLINE, PsycINFO, Embase, and Sociological Abstracts were searched for peer-reviewed, English-language articles from inception through January 1, 2018. Search terms included child* maltreatment, child* abuse, child* neglect, child bull*, child* trauma, child* advers*, and early life stress combined with prospective* and cohort. Study Selection: Studies with prospective measures of childhood maltreatment were first selected. Among the selected studies, those with corresponding retrospective measures of maltreatment were identified. Of 450 studies with prospective measures of childhood maltreatment, 16 had paired retrospective data to compute the Cohen κ coefficient. Data Extraction and Synthesis: Multiple investigators independently extracted data according to PRISMA and MOOSE guidelines. Random-effects meta-analyses were used to pool the results and test predictors of heterogeneity. Main Outcomes and Measures: The primary outcome was the agreement between prospective and retrospective measures of childhood maltreatment, expressed as a κ coefficient. Moderators of agreement were selected a priori and included the measure used for prospective or retrospective assessment of childhood maltreatment, age at retrospective report, sample size, sex distribution, and study quality.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 139.01
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 57
Authors
4Topics & keywords
- Retrospective cohort study
- PsycINFO
- Prospective cohort study
- Child abuse
- Poison control
- Medicine
- Neglect
- Injury prevention
- Peace, Justice and strong institutions