在 30-39 岁的成年人中,不良童年经历与家庭收入、教育程度和伴侣身份的关系

Claire Fisher , Audrey Stillerman , Joe Feinglass
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摘要

背景人们对童年不良经历(ACE)与年轻成人社会结果之间的关系知之甚少。目的研究童年不良经历与年轻成人家庭收入、教育程度和伴侣状况之间的关系。参与者13,767名年龄在30-39岁之间的受访者(人口加权估计值N=13,191,291)完成了2019年行为风险因素监测系统(BRFSS)中可选的ACES模块。方法使用2019年BRFSS分析ACE得分对30-39岁受访者中报告家庭收入超过75,000美元、拥有大学或研究生学位以及与伴侣同居的可能性的意义。结果与 ACE 为零的受访者相比,报告了四次或四次以上 ACE 暴露的受访者(占受访者的 20.2%)报告高收入的可能性略低(IRR:0.87,95% CI:0.结论青壮年的社会地位可能受到 ACE 的社会情感影响,这种影响超越了人口和健康状况的差异。在医疗保健、教育和就业等方面采取以创伤为导向的方法,可以增强对童年逆境的复原力。
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The association of adverse childhood experiences with household income, educational attainment and partnered status among adults aged 30-39

Background

The association of adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) with young adult social outcomes is poorly understood.

Objective

To examine the relationship between ACEs and young adult household income, education, and partnered status.

Participants

13,767 respondents (population-weighted estimate N = 13,191,291) aged 30–39 completed the optional ACES module in the 2019 Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System (BRFSS) from 17 states.

Methods

The 2019 BRFSS was used to analyze the significance of ACE scores for the likelihood of reporting household income greater than $75,000, a college or postgraduate degree, and living with a partner among respondents aged 30–39. Poisson regression analyses controlled for sociodemographic, health status, and behavioral risk characteristics.

Results

As compared to those with zero ACEs, respondents reporting four or more ACE exposures (20.2% of respondents) were marginally less likely to report high income (IRR: 0.87, 95% CI: 0.79–0.97) and one-third less likely to report a college degree (IRR: 0.68, 95% CI: 0.61–0.76), with no significant difference in partnered status.

Conclusions

Young adult social status may be shaped by social-emotional effects of ACEs that go beyond demographic and health status differences. Enhancing resilience to childhood adversity can benefit from a trauma-informed approach in health care, education, and employment.

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