Literature DB >> 31609471

Practitioner Review: Twenty years of research with adverse childhood experience scores - Advantages, disadvantages and applications to practice.

Rebecca E Lacey1, Helen Minnis2.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Adverse childhood experience (ACE) scores have become a common approach for considering childhood adversities and are highly influential in public policy and clinical practice. Their use is also controversial. Other ways of measuring adversity - examining single adversities, or using theoretically or empirically driven methods - might have advantages over ACE scores.
METHODS: In this narrative review we critique the conceptualisation and measurement of ACEs in research, clinical practice, public health and public discourse.
RESULTS: The ACE score approach has the advantages - and limitations - of simplicity: its simplicity facilitates wide-ranging applications in public policy, public health and clinical settings but risks over-simplistic communication of risk/causality, determinism and stigma. The other common approach - focussing on single adversities - is also limited because adversities tend to co-occur. Researchers are using rapidly accruing datasets on ACEs to facilitate new theoretical and empirical approaches but this work is at an early stage, e.g. weighting ACEs and including severity, frequency, duration and timing. More research is needed to establish what should be included as an ACE, how individual ACEs should be weighted, how ACEs cluster, and the implications of these findings for clinical work and policy. New ways of conceptualising and measuring ACEs that incorporate this new knowledge, while maintaining some of the simplicity of the current ACE questionnaire, could be helpful for clinicians, practitioners, patients and the public.
CONCLUSIONS: Although we welcome the current focus on ACEs, a more critical view of their conceptualisation, measurement, and application to practice settings is urgently needed.
© 2019 Association for Child and Adolescent Mental Health.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Adversity; child abuse; early life experience; social psychiatry; social work

Mesh:

Year:  2019        PMID: 31609471     DOI: 10.1111/jcpp.13135

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Child Psychol Psychiatry        ISSN: 0021-9630            Impact factor:   8.982


  34 in total

1.  Evidence for Revising the Adverse Childhood Experiences Screening Tool: a Scoping Review.

Authors:  Lee SmithBattle; Deborah G Loman; Jee Hye Yoo; Nancy Cibulka; Christina Rariden
Journal:  J Child Adolesc Trauma       Date:  2021-05-06

2.  Family focused interventions that address parental domestic violence and abuse, mental ill-health, and substance misuse in combination: A systematic review.

Authors:  Kate Allen; G J Melendez-Torres; Tamsin Ford; Chris Bonell; Katie Finning; Mary Fredlund; Alexa Gainsbury; Vashti Berry
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2022-07-29       Impact factor: 3.752

3.  Adolescent Mental Health and Family Economic Hardships: The Roles of Adverse Childhood Experiences and Family Conflict.

Authors:  Sheila Barnhart; Antonio R Garcia; Nicole R Karcher
Journal:  J Youth Adolesc       Date:  2022-08-23

4.  Differential Associations of Adversity Profiles with Adolescent Cognitive Control and Psychopathology.

Authors:  Alexis Brieant; Claudia Clinchard; Kirby Deater-Deckard; Jacob Lee; Brooks King-Casas; Jungmeen Kim-Spoon
Journal:  Res Child Adolesc Psychopathol       Date:  2022-09-15

5.  Links between Oppositional Defiant Disorder Dimensions, Psychophysiology, and Interpersonal versus Non-interpersonal Trauma.

Authors:  Amy J Mikolajewski; Michael S Scheeringa
Journal:  J Psychopathol Behav Assess       Date:  2021-09-15

6.  Disentangling Amygdala Response After Early-Life Trauma: Reactivity, Habituation, and Symptom Profiles.

Authors:  Sarah K Fineberg
Journal:  Biol Psychiatry Cogn Neurosci Neuroimaging       Date:  2021-11

7.  Childhood adversities and suicidal thoughts and behaviors among first-year college students: results from the WMH-ICS initiative.

Authors:  Philippe Mortier; Jordi Alonso; Randy P Auerbach; Jason Bantjes; Corina Benjet; Ronny Bruffaerts; Pim Cuijpers; David D Ebert; Jennifer Greif Green; Penelope Hasking; Eirini Karyotaki; Glenn Kiekens; Arthur Mak; Matthew K Nock; Siobhan O'Neill; Stephanie Pinder-Amaker; Nancy A Sampson; Dan J Stein; Gemma Vilagut; Chelsey Wilks; Alan M Zaslavsky; Patrick Mair; Ronald C Kessler
Journal:  Soc Psychiatry Psychiatr Epidemiol       Date:  2021-08-23       Impact factor: 4.519

8.  "Is there anything else you would like me to know?": Applying a trauma-informed approach to the administration of the adverse childhood experiences questionnaire.

Authors:  Whitney E Mendel; Mickey Sperlich; Nicole M Fava
Journal:  J Community Psychol       Date:  2021-03-31

9.  Adverse childhood experiences and early life inflammation in the Avon longitudinal study of parents and children.

Authors:  Rebecca E Lacey; Mel Bartley; Michelle Kelly-Irving; Leonardo Bevilacqua; Eleonora Iob; Yvonne Kelly; Laura D Howe
Journal:  Psychoneuroendocrinology       Date:  2020-10-13       Impact factor: 4.905

10.  Long-term Neural Embedding of Childhood Adversity in a Population-Representative Birth Cohort Followed for 5 Decades.

Authors:  Maria Z Gehred; Annchen R Knodt; Antony Ambler; Kyle J Bourassa; Andrea Danese; Maxwell L Elliott; Sean Hogan; David Ireland; Richie Poulton; Sandhya Ramrakha; Aaron Reuben; Maria L Sison; Terrie E Moffitt; Ahmad R Hariri; Avshalom Caspi
Journal:  Biol Psychiatry       Date:  2021-03-09       Impact factor: 13.382

View more

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.