A systematic review of adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) with people with intellectual disabilities: an unsafe gap in the literature

Chloe Crompton, Bethany Duncan, G. Simpson-Adkins
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Purpose This paper aims to systematically review the available evidence that explores adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) in people with intellectual disabilities (PwID). It is important to systematically review this literature as, to date, there is little known about the number of studies in this area, despite the World Health Organization declaring ACE prevention and support as a global public health priority. Design/methodology/approach Published studies were identified from electronic database searches. Key journals and reference lists were also hand searched. Findings Two studies met the inclusion criteria and the prevalence and frequency of ACEs experienced by participants of these studies analysed. Overall, due to the small number of studies meeting the inclusion criteria, it is difficult to establish any meaningful conclusions. Originality/value This appears to be the first systematic review to try and identify a research base looking at the prevalence of ACEs within a PwID population. Findings suggest that this is a highly neglected area of research, and the authors hope to have identified that further evidence is required to draw clearer conclusions about the impact of ACEs on PwID.
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对智障人士不良童年经历(ace)的系统回顾:文献中的不安全空白
目的对智力障碍患者不良童年经历(ace)的相关研究进行系统回顾。系统地回顾这些文献是很重要的,因为迄今为止,尽管世界卫生组织宣布ACE的预防和支持是全球公共卫生的优先事项,但该领域的研究数量知之甚少。设计/方法/方法已发表的研究从电子数据库检索中确定。关键期刊和参考书目也手工检索。两项研究符合纳入标准,并分析了这些研究参与者经历的ace的患病率和频率。总的来说,由于符合纳入标准的研究数量较少,很难得出有意义的结论。原创性/价值这似乎是第一个系统的综述,试图确定一个研究基础,研究在PwID人群中ace的患病率。研究结果表明,这是一个被高度忽视的研究领域,作者希望已经确定,需要进一步的证据来得出关于ace对PwID影响的更明确的结论。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.60
自引率
18.20%
发文量
22
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