儿童贫困、不良童年经历与成人健康结局。

IF 1.7 4区 社会学 Q1 SOCIAL WORK Health & Social Work Pub Date : 2021-08-05 DOI:10.1093/hsw/hlab018
Hana Lee, Kristen S Slack, Lawrence M Berger, Rebecca S Mather, Rebecca K Murray
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引用次数: 11

摘要

本研究旨在考虑儿童贫困与不良童年经历(ace)计数测量的关系,作为成人健康结果的预测因子,并确定关联是否对儿童贫困如何运作敏感。2014-2015年威斯康星州年度行为风险因素调查数据来自疾病控制与预防中心(CDC)行为风险因素监测系统(BRFSS),样本为10784名成年居民。成人健康结果(健康风险行为、一般健康问题、慢性健康问题和抑郁症)使用更为保守和严重的儿童贫困指标进行预测,作者检验了是否观察到的关联因纳入ACE计数变量而减弱。调查结果表明,儿童贫困的严重指标与一般和慢性健康问题以及成人抑郁症有关。当ace被纳入回归模型时,这些关联减弱,但保持完整。该研究使用了威斯康星州的疾病预防控制中心BRFSS数据,表明儿童贫困与成人健康之间的联系对儿童贫困的运作方式很敏感。童年贫困与其他ACE之间的关系是复杂的,因此有理由将前者视为一种独特的童年逆境,而不是ACE总结分数中的一个项目。
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Childhood Poverty, Adverse Childhood Experiences, and Adult Health Outcomes.

This study aimed to consider childhood poverty in relation to a count measure of adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) as a predictor of adult health outcomes and to determine whether associations are sensitive to how childhood poverty is operationalized. A sample of 10,784 adult residents was derived using data 2014-2015 Wisconsin annual Behavioral Risk Factor Survey data, derived from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System (BRFSS). Adult health outcomes (health risk behaviors, general health problems, chronic health problems, and depression) were predicted using a more conservative and severe indicator of childhood poverty, and authors tested whether observed associations were attenuated by the inclusion of an ACE count variable. Findings showed that severe indicators of childhood poverty are associated with general and chronic health problems as well as adult depression. These associations are attenuated, but remain intact, when ACEs are included in regression models. Using the CDC BRFSS data for Wisconsin, the study showed that associations between childhood poverty and adult health are sensitive to the way in which childhood poverty is operationalized. The relationship between childhood poverty and other ACEs is complex and thus warrants treating the former as a distinct childhood adversity rather than an item in an ACE summary score.

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来源期刊
Health & Social Work
Health & Social Work SOCIAL WORK-
CiteScore
1.90
自引率
6.70%
发文量
30
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