| Literature DB >> 35381589 |
Monique C Pfaltz1,2, Sarah L Halligan3,4, Shilat Haim-Nachum5, Marie R Sopp5,6, Fredrik Åhs1, Rahel Bachem7, Eleonora Bartoli8, Habte Belete9, Tilahun Belete9, Azi Berzengi10, Daniel Dukes11,12, Aziz Essadek13, Naved Iqbal14, Laura Jobson15, Rachel Langevin16, Einat Levy-Gigi5, Antonia M Lüönd2, Chantal Martin-Soelch17, Tanja Michael6, Misari Oe18, Miranda Olff19,20, Deniz Ceylan21, Vijaya Raghavan22, Muniarajan Ramakrishnan1, Vedat Sar23, Georgina Spies24,25,26, Dany Laure Wadji17,27, Rachel Wamser-Nanney28, Natalia E Fares-Otero29, Ulrich Schnyder2, Soraya Seedat23,24,25.
Abstract
Childhood maltreatment (CM) is linked to impairments in various domains of social functioning. Here, we argue that it is critical to identify factors that underlie impaired social functioning as well as processes that mediate the beneficial health effects of positive relationships in individuals exposed to CM. Key research recommendations are presented, focusing on: (1) identifying attachment-related alterations in specific inter- and intrapersonal processes (e.g., regulation of closeness and distance) that underlie problems in broader domains of social functioning (e.g., lack of perceived social support) in individuals affected by CM; (2) identifying internal (e.g., current emotional state) and external situational factors (e.g., cultural factors, presence of close others) that modulate alterations in specific social processes; and (3) identifying mechanisms that explain the positive health effects of intact social functioning. Methodological recommendations include: (1) assessing social processes through interactive and (close to) real-life assessments inside and outside the laboratory; (2) adopting an interdisciplinary, lifespan perspective to assess social processes, using multi-method assessments; (3) establishing global research collaborations to account for cultural influences on social processes and enable replications across laboratories and countries. The proposed line of research will contribute to globally develop and refine interventions that prevent CM and further positive relationships, which - likely through buffering the effects of chronic stress and corresponding allostatic load - foster resilience and improve mental and physical health, thereby reducing personal suffering and the societal and economic costs of CM and its consequences. Interventions targeting euthymia and psychological well-being are promising therapeutic concepts in this context. The Author(s). Published by S. Karger AG, Basel.Entities:
Keywords: Child abuse; Early interventions; Interpersonal relations; Social behavior; Social support
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35381589 PMCID: PMC9393832 DOI: 10.1159/000523667
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Psychother Psychosom ISSN: 0033-3190 Impact factor: 25.617
Fig. 1Conceptual framework, illustrating the known associations between CM, mental health, physical health, and social functioning, and putative factors associated with CM, mental health, physical health, and social functioning. Positive associations are marked with (+); negative associations are marked with (−); dashed lines represent moderator effects.
Specific recommendations
| Overarching aims | Specific aims and research questions |
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| 1. Identify key socially relevant processes in individuals affected by CM | Focus on processes that are likely affected by attachment difficulties arising from CM, including by taking a cross-cultural perspective and applying attachment-related concepts that reflect cultural variation |
| Assess whether alterations in specific social processes mediate the relationship between attachment difficulties and impaired social functioning | |
| Identify specific intrapersonal processes (e.g., responses to social signals such as facial expressions and touch; regulation of closeness and distance; alterations in communicative processes and behaviors; non-verbal signals such as body posture, facial expressions, and expressions of emotions in the voice) | |
| Explore whether specific interpersonal processes (e.g., interpersonal emotion regulation, shared social identities, group memberships, and social identity management) that have received increased attention in basic research are relevant for the field of traumatic stress, including CM | |
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| 2. Identify factors that enhance or buffer the degree to which alterations in specific socially relevant processes are present in a specific situation (Fig. | Assess internal factors that can modulate social responding (e.g., an individual's current cognitive, emotional, and motivational state; personal resources in the form of compensatory mechanisms) |
| Assess external factors such as culture and social context (e.g., presence of trusted others) | |
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| 3. Assess whether specific socially relevant processes impact broader social problems | Explore if specific social processes known to be affected by CM are related to problems in broader domains of social functioning known to be affected by CM (e.g., quality of interactions and relationships, social support) |
| Replicate findings on the role of maladaptive internalized schemas, emotion regulation and recognition, and assess the role of social processes relevant to social functioning that have not been previously systematically studied in a CM context | |
| Assess whether findings from non-clinical populations (e.g., effects of adequate perceptions of others' emotions on relationship satisfaction) apply to individuals affected by CM with mental disorders | |
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| 4. Identify factors that explain the positive health effects of intact social functioning | Assess whether the positive effect of social functioning on mental and physical health operates by buffering the effects of chronic stress (CM) on allostatic load |
| Focus on the biological pathways via which social support may benefit individuals exposed to CM | |
Methodological considerations
| Methodological aspects | Recommendations |
|---|---|
| Research setting | Balance the need for staying close to real-life conditions (enabling ecological validity and generalizability of findings) and the need for controlled, standardized conditions (in order to vary factors of interest systematically and to control for confounding variables) |
| Assess social processes outside and inside the laboratory | |
| Develop and apply experimental stimuli and settings that are close to real-life (e.g., non-standardized or partially standardized interactive experimental paradigms; virtual reality environments) | |
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| Study designs | Complement cross-sectional study designs with longitudinal studies to map relational and affective domains to mental and physical health trajectories, and to assess how socio-emotional processes develop, interact, and predict social functioning over time |
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| Research methods | Use multi-method approaches (e.g., behavioral or psychophysiological assessments; ecological momentary assessment) to study socially relevant microprocesses, especially with different interaction partners |
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| Research teams | Establish interdisciplinary collaborations to assess the interplay of neuronal, peripheral physiological, hormonal, cultural, and genetic factors |
| Seek collaborations with basic science researchers to understand socially relevant and biological processes in the general population (before applying concepts to the field of CM) | |
| Establish cross-national research collaborations that include researchers from currently underrepresented countries | |
| Replicate findings across laboratories and countries to strengthen reliability and generalizability of findings | |
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| Cross-cultural research | Distinguish culture from ethnicity (diversity of cultures within broader categorizations of ethnicity) |
| Consider individual and intragroup differences in the internalization of cultural beliefs | |
| Use standardized procedures for translation and back-translation and consider clinimetric selection criteria when translating existing self-report scales and developing new ones | |
| Foster cross-cultural development of new psychometric assessment tools and experimental paradigms that are suitable for diverse cultural and ethnic groups | |