Childhood adversity – NeuRA Library https://library.neura.edu.au NeuRA Evidence Libraries Fri, 08 Apr 2022 03:29:53 +0000 en-AU hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=5.8 https://library.neura.edu.au/wp-content/uploads/sites/3/2021/10/cropped-Library-Logo_favicon-32x32.jpg Childhood adversity – NeuRA Library https://library.neura.edu.au 32 32 Childhood adversity https://library.neura.edu.au/bipolar-disorder/risk-factors-bipolar-disorder/non-genetic-risk-factors-bipolar-disorder/childhood-adversity-2/ Thu, 04 Apr 2019 03:44:22 +0000 https://library.neura.edu.au/?p=15251 What is childhood adversity in bipolar disorder? Childhood adversities encompass a range of childhood experiences, including loss of a close relative, bullying, physical abuse, sexual abuse, emotional abuse, and neglect. The nature, timing, severity, and duration of exposure are likely to influence mental health outcomes. What is the evidence for childhood adversities in people with bipolar disorder? Moderate quality evidence finds a small to medium-sized increased risk of bipolar disorder after exposure to any childhood adversity. There were significantly higher rates of childhood adversity in people with bipolar disorder compared to people without bipolar disorder and compared to people with...

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What is childhood adversity in bipolar disorder?

Childhood adversities encompass a range of childhood experiences, including loss of a close relative, bullying, physical abuse, sexual abuse, emotional abuse, and neglect. The nature, timing, severity, and duration of exposure are likely to influence mental health outcomes.

What is the evidence for childhood adversities in people with bipolar disorder?

Moderate quality evidence finds a small to medium-sized increased risk of bipolar disorder after exposure to any childhood adversity. There were significantly higher rates of childhood adversity in people with bipolar disorder compared to people without bipolar disorder and compared to people with major depression. No differences in rates of childhood adversity were found between people with bipolar disorder and people with schizophrenia.

The rate of childhood emotional abuse in adults with bipolar disorder is around 30.0% compared to a general population rate between 6.54% and 14.07%. The rate of childhood physical abuse in adults with bipolar disorder is around 18.0% compared to a general population rate between 6.69% and 12.0%. The rate of childhood sexual abuse in adults with bipolar disorder is around 22.0% compared to a general population rate between 6.2% and 9.46%. The rate of childhood emotional neglect in adults with bipolar disorder is around 31.0% compared to a general population rate between 13.3% and 16.19%. The rate of childhood physical neglect in bipolar disorder is around 30.0% (no population rate is reported for physical neglect).

Childhood adversity is associated with more symptom episodes and severity, rapid cycling, psychosis, anxiety, post-traumatic stress disorder, substance use, suicides, and an earlier age at onset.

October 2021

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Childhood adversity https://library.neura.edu.au/schizophrenia/risk-factors/non-genetic/childhood-adversity/ Wed, 15 May 2013 07:28:14 +0000 https://library.neura.edu.au/?p=560 What is childhood adversity in schizophrenia? Childhood adversities encompass a range of childhood experiences, including loss of a close relative, parental separation, bullying, physical abuse, sexual abuse, emotional abuse, and neglect. The nature, timing, severity, and duration of exposure are likely to influence mental health, however any evidence that childhood adversity directly causes psychosis or schizophrenia is controversial. Firstly, psychotic disorders may be secondary to comorbid affective, substance use, personality, or post-traumatic stress disorders, all of which have been linked to early adversities, and all are common in those with a psychotic mental illness. Another difficulty is accurately measuring childhood...

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What is childhood adversity in schizophrenia?

Childhood adversities encompass a range of childhood experiences, including loss of a close relative, parental separation, bullying, physical abuse, sexual abuse, emotional abuse, and neglect. The nature, timing, severity, and duration of exposure are likely to influence mental health, however any evidence that childhood adversity directly causes psychosis or schizophrenia is controversial. Firstly, psychotic disorders may be secondary to comorbid affective, substance use, personality, or post-traumatic stress disorders, all of which have been linked to early adversities, and all are common in those with a psychotic mental illness. Another difficulty is accurately measuring childhood adversity, as it is dependent on assessment of the experiences via information collected retrospectively. This is particularly problematic if having a psychotic disorder impacts on memory recall.

What is the evidence for childhood adversity?

Moderate to high quality evidence found a small to medium-sized increased risk of schizophrenia and other psychotic disorders following exposure to childhood adversities (abuse, neglect, bullying, or parental loss) compared to people without exposure to childhood adversities. Rates of childhood sexual abuse in people with psychosis was approximately 26.3%, childhood physical abuse was approximately 38.8%, and childhood emotional abuse was approximately 34%. Rates were highest in older studies, in studies with more females, in studies with older patients, and in studies of patients with comorbid substance abuse.

In people with a psychotic disorder, exposure to any childhood adversity was associated with more severe symptom severity and poor cognition. For increased positive symptoms, there were small associations with sexual abuse, physical abuse, emotional abuse, and emotional neglect, and no association with physical neglect. For increased negative symptoms, there were small associations with sexual abuse, physical abuse, physical neglect, and emotional neglect, and no association with emotional abuse. For increased depression, there were small to medium-sized associations with sexual abuse, physical abuse, emotional abuse, emotional neglect, and physical neglect.

Compared to people with anxiety disorders, there was a medium-sized increased risk of childhood adversity in people with schizophrenia. Compared to people with dissociative disorders or post-traumatic stress disorder, there was a large decreased risk of childhood adversity in people with schizophrenia. There were no differences in rates of childhood adversity between people with schizophrenia and people with depressive disorders or affective psychosis.

Moderate to low quality evidence finds mediation and moderating effects of other life events and stressors, social defeat, loneliness, and social support on the relationship between childhood adversity and psychosis. Mediation, but not moderating effects were found for negative cognitive schemas about the self, the world and others, attachment style and parental bonding, mood symptoms, emotional dysregulation, post-traumatic stress disorder, and dissociation. Mediators are mechanisms through which the relationship may be at least partly explained, while moderators were factors that changed the relationship.

April 2022

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