Adverse Childhood Experience-Related Conditions and Substance Use in Adolescents: A Secondary Analysis of Cross-Sectional Survey Data

IF 1.8 4区 医学 Q2 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH Journal of School Health Pub Date : 2024-01-28 DOI:10.1111/josh.13429
Wasantha Jayawardene MD, PhD, David Lohrmann PhD, Jon Agley PhD, Mikyoung Jun PhD, Ruth Gassman PhD
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Abstract

BACKGROUND

Adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) cluster within children. In addition to standardized ACE measures, there exist “ACE-related” measures that are either directly or indirectly related to the standardized ACE constructs. This study aimed to identify ACE-related latent classes of adolescents and describe past-month substance use in each class by sex and race/ethnicity.

METHODS

Data from the 2018 Indiana Youth Survey (N = 70,703), which is a repeated self-administered, cross-sectional survey, were used. Latent class analysis was conducted using ACE-related family (parent incarceration, insulting/yelling within family, inability to discuss personal problems) and school (hate being in school, feeling unsafe, inability to talk to teachers one-on-one) items. Dependent variable combined past 30-day use-frequency of 17 substances. Two-way analysis of variances examined ACE by sex and race/ethnicity interaction.

RESULTS

Four ACE-related classes emerged: “Family-Only” (11.2%), “School-Only” (16.5%), “Family-School” (8.0%), and “No-ACE” (64.3%). Substance use was highest in “Family-School” (mean = 0.67); lowest in “No-ACE” (mean = 0.21). Significant race/ethnicity (F = 27.06; p < .0001), ACE * sex interaction (F = 12.13; p < .0001) and ACE * race/ethnicity interaction (F = 4.57; p < .0001) effects emerged. Within each ACE-related class, substance use was lowest for Asians and highest for Hispanics.

CONCLUSIONS

Adverse childhood experience-related items cluster within children across school and family environments and clustering differs by race/ethnicity, but not by sex. Incorporating ACE-related items into school surveys enhances the ability to implement interventions that target relationships between ACEs and substance use.

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与童年不良经历相关的状况与青少年药物使用:对横断面调查数据的二次分析。
背景:儿童的不良童年经历(ACEs)会在儿童体内聚集。除了标准化的 ACE 测量方法外,还有一些 "ACE 相关 "测量方法,它们与标准化的 ACE 结构直接或间接相关。本研究旨在确定青少年中与 ACE 相关的潜在类别,并按性别和种族/族裔描述每个类别中过去一个月的药物使用情况:研究使用了 2018 年印第安纳州青少年调查(N = 70703)的数据,该调查是一项重复的自填式横截面调查。使用与 ACE 相关的家庭(父母入狱、家庭内侮辱/谩骂、无法讨论个人问题)和学校(讨厌在学校、感觉不安全、无法与老师一对一交谈)项目进行潜类分析。因变量综合了过去 30 天内使用 17 种药物的频率。双向方差分析研究了 ACE 与性别和种族/族裔的交互作用:结果:出现了四个与 ACE 相关的类别:"只有家庭"(11.2%)、"只有学校"(16.5%)、"家庭-学校"(8.0%)和 "无 ACE"(64.3%)。在 "家庭-学校 "中,药物使用率最高(平均 = 0.67);在 "无ACE "中,药物使用率最低(平均 = 0.21)。种族/人种差异显著(F = 27.06;P 结论:"种族/人种差异 "与 "童年不良经历 "之间存在显著差异:在不同学校和家庭环境中,与童年不良经历相关的项目会在儿童中聚集,聚集程度因种族/族裔而异,但与性别无关。将与 ACE 相关的项目纳入学校调查可提高针对 ACE 与药物使用之间的关系实施干预的能力。
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来源期刊
Journal of School Health
Journal of School Health 医学-公共卫生、环境卫生与职业卫生
CiteScore
3.70
自引率
9.10%
发文量
134
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: Journal of School Health is published 12 times a year on behalf of the American School Health Association. It addresses practice, theory, and research related to the health and well-being of school-aged youth. The journal is a top-tiered resource for professionals who work toward providing students with the programs, services, and environment they need for good health and academic success.
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