| Literature DB >> 27465498 |
M Smith1, A E Williamson2, D Walsh3, G McCartney4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Scotland has a persistently high mortality rate that is not solely due to the effects of socio-economic deprivation. This "excess" mortality is observed across the entire country, but is greatest in and around the post-industrial conurbation of West Central Scotland. Despite systematic investigation, the causes of the excess mortality remain the subject of ongoing debate. DISCUSSION: Attachment processes are a fundamental part of human development, and have a profound influence on adult personality and behaviour, especially in response to stressors. Many studies have also shown that childhood adversity is correlated with adult morbidity and mortality. The interplay between childhood adversity and attachment is complex and not fully elucidated, but will include socio-economic, intergenerational and psychological factors. Importantly, some adverse health outcomes for parents (such as problem substance use or suicide) will simultaneously act as risk factors for their children. Data show that some forms of "household dysfunction" relating to childhood adversity are more prevalent in Scotland: such problems include parental problem substance use, rates of imprisonment, rates of suicide and rates of children being taken into care. However other measures of childhood or family wellbeing have not been found to be substantially different in Scotland compared to England. We suggest in this paper that the role of childhood adversity and attachment experience merits further investigation as a plausible mechanism influencing health in Scotland. A model is proposed which sets out some of the interactions between the factors of interest, and we propose parameters for the types of study which would be required to evaluate the validity of the model.Entities:
Keywords: Adverse childhood experiences; Attachment; Health inequalities; Mortality; Public health; Scotland; Social determinants of health
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27465498 PMCID: PMC4964073 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-016-3201-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Fig. 1Association of childhood adversity with some adult physical health problems (shown in blue) and mental health and addiction problems (shown in red). The graph is adapted from Felitti [12], & shows odds ratios adjusted for age, gender, race, and educational attainment for adults exposed to four or more Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACE)
Concepts relating childhood experience to adult outcomes
| Definitions | ||
|---|---|---|
| Exposure | Adverse childhood Experiences | An epidemiological measure of childhood abuse, neglect, and family dysfunction, which can be assessed in adults using a ten-item Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACE) questionnaire. ACEs include emotional and physical abuse or neglect, sexual abuse, and exposure to household violence or substance misuse. ACE would include most forms of childhood trauma. |
| Complex Trauma | A psychological construct that relates childhood traumatic experiences to adult emotions and behaviour. A particular focus on health harming behaviours, and on service responses to those problems. | |
| Response | Attachment | A fundamental aspect of human development: infants’ biological instinct to develop a relationship with at least one caregiver for safety and protection. Over time, the “attunement” developed in such relationships helps the child to regulate their feelings and make sense of the world. Secure attachment develops when parents consistently respond to their child’s needs. Patterns of “insecure” attachment include resistant, avoidant and disorganised types. Attachment theory has also been applied to adult relationships. |
| Consequences | Allostatic Load | The physiological consequences of chronic exposure to fluctuating or heightened stress, which may lead to physical, behavioural and cognitive effects. |
| Toxic stress | Prolonged activation of the body’s stress response, occurring when a child experiences strong, frequent, and/or enduring adversity without the protection of a supportive adult relationship. Such adversity could arise from the burden of longstanding poverty, and the forms of ACE described above. Integrates aspects of both exposure and “resilience” to traumatic experiences. | |
Fig. 2Model linking childhood stress, trauma and adversity to adult health outcomes, showing the modifying effect of attachment experience
Fig. 3Cause-specific standardised mortality ratios (standardised by age, gender and area deprivation), 2003-07, for causes of death in Glasgow compared to Liverpool and Manchester (Liverpool and Manchester combined = 100). Mortality associated with physical health problems is shown in blue, and with mental health problems is shown in red. “External causes” includes deaths due to violence, which are not necessarily attributable to mental health problems. The graph is adapted from Walsh et al. [86]