Childhood Adversities and Adult Psychopathology in the Who World Mental Health Surveys
Katie A. McLaughlin
Jennifer Greif Green
Michael J. Gruber
Nancy A. Sampson
Alan M. Zaslavsky
SimpleOriginal

Summary

Childhood adversity increases the risk of future challenges, including mental health diagnoses, particularly those related to unstable home environments (e.g., parental mental illness, abuse, neglect).

2010

Childhood Adversities and Adult Psychopathology in the Who World Mental Health Surveys

Keywords Difficult experiences; Childhood ; Mental health disorders ; Family problems ; Neglect ; Abuse ; Development

Abstract

Background Although significant associations of childhood adversities with adult mental disorders are widely documented, most studies focus on single childhood adversities predicting single disorders. Aims To examine joint associations of 12 childhood adversities with first onset of 20 DSM–IV disorders in World Mental Health (WMH) Surveys in 21 countries. Method Nationally or regionally representative surveys of 51 945 adults assessed childhood adversities and lifetime DSM–IV disorders with the WHO Composite International Diagnostic Interview (CIDI). Results Childhood adversities were highly prevalent and interrelated. Childhood adversities associated with maladaptive family functioning (e.g. parental mental illness, child abuse, neglect) were the strongest predictors of disorders. Co-occurring childhood adversities associated with maladaptive family functioning had significant subadditive predictive associations and little specificity across disorders. Childhood adversities account for 29.8% of all disorders across countries. Conclusions Childhood adversities have strong associations with all classes of disorders at all life-course stages in all groups of WMH countries. Long-term association.

Introduction

Significant associations between retrospectively reported childhood adversities and adult mental disorders have been documented in numerous epidemiological studies.16 Most of these studies, however, either considered only a single childhood adversity7,8 or a composite measure that did not allow differential effects of multiple childhood adversities to be examined.9 Only a few studies compared associations of childhood adversities with different types of mental disorders or examined changes in childhood adversities’ effects over the life course.10,11 Few studies examined cross-national variation in exposure12,13 or effects14,15 of childhood adversities. Furthermore, lack of comparability of measures across countries raises questions about accuracy of the few existing cross-national comparisons.12 The present study addresses these problems by examining the prevalence and associations of retrospectively reported childhood adversities with first onset of a wide variety of mental disorders across the life course in epidemiological surveys in 21 countries in the World Health Organization (WHO) World Mental Health (WMH) Survey Initiative.16

Method

Sample

The WMH surveys were administered in nine countries classified by the World Bank as high income (Belgium, France, Germany, Israel, Italy, Japan, The Netherlands, Spain, USA), six high-middle income (Brazil, Bulgaria, Lebanon, Mexico, Romania, South Africa), and six low/lower-middle income (Colombia, India, Iraq, Nigeria, People’s Republic of China, Ukraine)17 (online Table DS1). A total of 51 945 adults (age 18 and older) participated in these surveys. Most featured nationally representative household samples. Two (Colombia and Mexico) were representative of urban areas, one of selected states (Nigeria) and the remaining four of selected metropolitan areas (Brazil, India, Japan, People’s Republic of China). Informed consent was obtained before administering interviews. The samples that are not nationally representative all focus on urban areas. The institutional review board of the organisations that coordinated the surveys approved and monitored compliance with procedures for informed consent and protecting participants. Weights were used to adjust samples for differential probabilities of selection and to match the sample with population sociodemographic distributions. The weighted (by sample size) average response rate was 73.1% (range 45.9–98.8). Further details about WMH survey methodology are available elsewhere.18

Measures

Mental disorders

Mental disorders were assessed with the WHO Composite International Diagnostic Interview (CIDI) Version 3.0,19 a fully-structured lay-administered interview that generated diagnoses for 20 commonly occurring mood disorders (major depressive disorder, dysthymic disorder, bipolar I disorder, bipolar II disorder, subthreshold bipolar disorder), anxiety disorders (generalised anxiety disorder, panic disorder, agoraphobia without panic disorder, specific phobia, social phobia, post-traumatic stress disorder, separation anxiety disorder), behaviour disorders (attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder, oppositional–defiant disorder, conduct disorder, intermittent explosive disorder) and substance disorders (alcohol and drug misuse, alcohol and drug dependence with misuse). DSM–IV20 criteria were used with diagnostic hierarchy rules (other than oppositional–defiant disorder, which was defined with or without conduct disorder, and substance misuse, which was defined with or without dependence) and organic exclusion rules. Masked clinical reappraisal interviews with the Structured Clinical Interview for DSM–IV (SCID)21 in four WMH countries found generally good concordance between diagnoses based on the CIDI and SCID.22 Age at onset of lifetime disorders was assessed retrospectively using a special question sequence shown experimentally to yield more plausible distributions than standard age at onset questions.23

Childhood adversities

Twelve dichotomously scored childhood adversities occurring before age 18 were assessed, including three types of interpersonal loss (parental death, parental divorce, other separation from parents), four types of parental maladjustment (mental illness, substance misuse, criminality, violence), three types of maltreatment (physical abuse, sexual abuse, neglect) and two other childhood adversities (life-threatening respondent physical illness, family economic adversity). The measures of parental death, divorce and other loss (e.g. respondent foster care placement) include biological and non-biological parents. Parental criminality, family economic adversity and sexual abuse were assessed with questions used in previous epidemiological surveys.11 Parental criminality was assessed with questions about property crime and imprisonment, and economic adversity with questions about whether the family often lacked enough money to pay for basic necessities of living.10 Sexual abuse was assessed with questions about repeated fondling, attempted rape or rape.24 Parental mental illness (major depression, generalised anxiety disorder, panic disorder, antisocial personality disorder) and substance misuse were assessed with the Family History Research Diagnostic Criteria Interview.25,26 Family violence and physical abuse were assessed with a modified version of the Conflict Tactics Scale.27 Neglect was assessed with questions used in child welfare research about frequency of not having adequate food, clothing or medical care, having inadequate supervision, and having to do age-inappropriate chores.28 Finally, life-threatening childhood physical illness was assessed with a standard chronic conditions checklist.29

Several WMH countries omitted selected childhood adversities (sexual abuse in Iraq and Shenzhen; neglect in South Africa; parental divorce and neglect in the six Western European countries; neglect and parent psychopathology in Israel) based on concerns about respondent embarrassment. Rather than exclude this large subset of countries from analysis or exclude the missing childhood adversities from the countries where they were assessed, we included a separate dummy predictor variable to indicate whether each childhood adversity was assessed and multiple imputation30 to impute individual-level missing values. Multiple imputation implicitly assumes that the correlates of the missing childhood adversities are the same as in the countries where the childhood adversities were and were not assessed. Although this assumption is unlikely to be completely accurate, it allows us to maximise the use of available childhood adversities data. Imprecision in imputations is likely to lead to underestimation of overall childhood adversities effects.

Analysis methods

Tetrachoric factor analysis was used to examine associations among the childhood adversities. Multivariate associations of childhood adversities with first onset of DSM–IV/CIDI disorders (based on retrospective age at onset reports) were estimated using discrete-time survival analysis with person-year as the unit of analysis31 and a consolidated data file that stacked the 20 disorder-specific person-year files across the 21 countries and included dummy predictor variables that distinguished among these 420 data files. Each model controlled for respondent age at interview, gender and other prior DSM–IV/CIDI disorders. A number of different model specifications were examined. The Akaike information criterion (AIC)32 was used to select the best model, which was then estimated in subsamples defined by life-course stage and class of disorders (mood, anxiety, behaviour and substance disorders). Survival coefficients and standard errors were exponentiated to create odds ratios and 95% confidence intervals.The population-attributable risk proportion (PARP) was calculated using simulation methods for each class of disorders, life-course stage and group of countries. The PARP is the proportion of the cumulative predicted value of an outcome disorder explained statistically by specific predictors. If the odds ratios in the model are as a result of causal effects of the childhood adversities, PARP can be interpreted as the expected proportional reduction in outcome prevalence if childhood adversities were eradicated.33 All significance tests were evaluated using 0.05-level two-sided tests. As the WMH data are both clustered and weighted, the design-based Taylor series method34 implemented in the SUDAAN (version 8.0.1) software system on UNIX was used to estimate standard errors and to evaluate statistical significance.

Results

Prevalence and structure of childhood adversities

Similar proportions of respondents reported any childhood adversities in high-(38.4%), high-middle-(38.9%), and low-/lower-middle-(39.1%) income countries (Table 1). Parental death was the most common childhood adversity (11.0–14.8%). Other common childhood adversities included physical abuse (5.3–10.8%), family violence (4.2–7.8%) and parental mental illness (5.3–6.7%). Multiple childhood adversities were common among respondents with any childhood adversities (59.3–66.2%), with mean childhood adversities among respondents with two or more of 2.5–2.9.

Table 1

Prevalence of childhood adversities in World Mental Health (WMH) surveys carried out in high-, high-middle-, and low/lower-middle-income countries

High-income countries (n = 20 652)

High-middle-income countries (n = 15 240)

Low-/lower-middle-income countries (n = 16 053)

Total (

n

= 51 945)

%

(s.e.)

%

(s.e.)

%

(s.e.)

%

(s.e.)

I. Interpersonal loss

Parental death

11.0

(0.3)

11.9

(0.4)

14.8

(0.4)

12.5

(0.2)

Parental divorce

10.1

(0.3)

5.2

(0.3)

3.5

(0.2)

6.6

(0.2)

Other parental loss

4.0

(0.2)

4.0

(0.2)

7.4

(0.3)

5.1

(0.1)

II. Parental maladjustment

Parental mental illness

5.3

(0.2)

6.7

(0.3)

6.7

(0.3)

6.2

(0.2)

Parental substance disorder

4.5

(0.2)

5.0

(0.3)

2.5

(0.2)

4.0

(0.1)

Parental criminal behaviour

3.4

(0.1)

3.1

(0.2)

2.2

(0.2)

2.9

(0.1)

Family violence

7.8

(0.3)

7.1

(0.3)

4.2

(0.2)

6.5

(0.1)

III. Maltreatment

Physical abuse

5.3

(0.2)

10.8

(0.4)

9

(0.3)

8.0

(0.2)

Sexual abuse

2.4

(0.1)

0.6

(0.1)

1.5

(0.1)

1.6

(0.1)

Neglect

4.4

(0.2)

5.2

(0.2)

3.6

(0.2)

4.4

(0.1)

IV. Other childhood adversities

Physical illness

3.9

(0.2)

2.4

(0.2)

2.6

(0.2)

3.1

(0.1)

Economic adversity

5.2

(0.2)

2.9

(0.2)

1.4

(0.2)

3.4

(0.1)

V. Total number of childhood adversities

a

Any

38.4

(0.5)

38.9

(0.6)

39.1

(0.6)

38.8

(0.4)

One/any

59.3

(0.7)

59.6

(0.8)

66.2

(0.9)

61.5

(0.5)

Two/any

22.5

(0.6)

24.6

(0.8)

21.8

(0.7)

22.9

(0.4)

Three/any

9.0

(0.4)

9.0

(0.5)

7.5

(0.5)

8.5

(0.3)

Four/any

5.0

(0.4)

4.1

(0.3)

3.1

(0.3)

4.1

(0.2)

Five or more/any

4.2

(0.2)

2.7

(0.3)

1.4

(0.2)

2.9

(0.2)

a. Prevalence estimates in the last five rows represent the proportions of all respondents with any childhood adversity who have exactly one, two, three, four, five or more. These five proportions sum to 100% in each column.

A total of 62 of the 66 tetrachoric correlations between pairs of childhood adversities (94%) were positive in high and low/lower-middle and 58 (88%) in high-middle-income countries. Medians and interquartile ranges (twenty-fifth to seventy-fifth percentiles) of correlations were 0.27 (0.14–0.35) in high, 0.20 (0.12–0.42) in high-middle and 0.17 (0.10–0.31) in low/lower-middle-income countries. Factor analysis found one consistently strong factor representing maladaptive family functioning (parental mental illness, substance misuse, criminal behaviour, domestic violence, physical and sexual abuse, neglect), with factor loadings of 0.44–1.0. The remaining childhood adversities were less highly intercorrelated.

Associations of childhood adversities with DSM–IV/CIDI disorders

All 12 childhood adversities were significantly associated with elevated risk of DSM–IV disorders in bivariate models pooled across all outcomes and countries, with odds ratios of 1.6–2.0 for childhood adversities associated with maladaptive family functioning and 1.1–1.5 for other childhood adversities. (Detailed results of this and other models described below are available from the authors on request.) Odds ratios were smaller in multivariate models that included all childhood adversities as predictors (1.1–1.6 childhood adversities associated with maladaptive family functioning; 1.1–1.3 for other childhood adversities). The 12 degree of freedom χ2-test for the joint effects of all childhood adversities was significant (χ212 = 1536.6, P<0.001). A multivariate model that considered only number rather than type of childhood adversities showed generally increasing odds ratios from 1.5 for exactly one to 3.5–3.2 for six and for seven or more childhood adversities (compared with no childhood adversities). The χ2-test for the joint effects of number-of-childhood adversities was statistically significant (χ27 = 1345.8, P<0.001). A model that considered both types and numbers of childhood adversities had a better AIC, with both types (χ212 = 695.7, P<0.001) and number (χ26 = 200.4, P<0.001) significant. More complex inherently nonlinear models did not improve AIC further. However, fit was improved by distinguishing between number of childhood adversities associated with maladaptive family functioning and number of other childhood adversities.

Results of this final model are strikingly consistent across country groups (Table 2). Odds ratios of childhood adversities associated with maladaptive family functioning are consistently positive and significant (1.3–2.4). Odds ratios of other childhood adversities are generally smaller (0.9–1.5) and less consistently significant. Odds ratios of number of childhood adversities associated with maladaptive family functioning are consistently negative, mostly significant, and inversely related to number of such adversities (0.4–0.9 for two to three, 0.2–0.5 for four to five and 0.0–0.3 for six to seven adversities). This negative pattern means that the increasing odds of disorder onset with increasing number of childhood adversities associated with maladaptive family functioning occurs at a significantly decreasing rate as the number of these adversities increases. The odds ratio associated with number of other childhood adversities is less consistent in sign and significance.

Table 2

Multivariate associations (odds ratios) between childhood adversities and the subsequent first onset of DSM–IV/CIDI disorders based on the final multivariate modela

High-income countries (n = 20 652)

High-middle-income countries (n =15 240)

Low-/lower-middle-income countries (n = 16 053)

Total (

n

= 51 945)

OR

(95% CI)

χ

2

OR

(95% CI)

χ

2

OR

(95% CI)

χ

2

OR

(95% CI)

χ

2

I. Maladaptive family functioning

b

289.2*

152.6*

244.2*

585.8*

Parental mental illness

1.9*

(1.7–2.1)

1.9*

(1.7–2.1)

2.4*

(2.2–2.7)

2.0*

(1.9–2.2)

Parental substance misuse

1.8*

(1.6–2.0)

1.4*

(1.2–1.6)

1.6*

(1.3–1.9)

1.6*

(1.5–1.7)

Parental criminality

1.6*

(1.4–1.8)

1.6*

(1.3–1.8)

1.7*

(1.4–2.1)

1.6*

(1.4–1.7)

Family violence

1.7*

(1.5–1.9)

1.6*

(1.4–1.8)

1.6*

(1.3–1.9)

1.6*

(1.5–1.8)

Physical abuse

1.9*

(1.7–2.1)

1.6*

(1.4–1.9)

2.0*

(1.7–2.3)

1.8*

(1.7–2.0)

Sexual abuse

1.9*

(1.7–2.2)

1.7*

(1.4–2.1)

1.5*

(1.2–1.9)

1.8*

(1.6–2.0)

Neglect

1.6*

(1.4–1.8)

1.3*

(1.1–1.5)

1.7*

(1.4–2.0)

1.5*

(1.4–1.6)

II. Other childhood adversities

c

365.5*

35.8*

32.8*

104.7*

Parental death

1.1

(1.0–1.2)

1.1*

(1.0–1.3)

1.0

(0.9–1.2)

1.1*

(1.0–1.2)

Parental divorce

1.1

(1.0–1.2)

1.3*

(1.1–1.4)

1.2*

(1.1–1.4)

1.1*

(1.0–1.2)

Other parental loss

1.4*

(1.3–1.5)

1.3*

(1.1–1.6)

1.3*

(1.1–1.5)

1.4*

(1.2–1.5)

Serious physical illness

1.4*

(1.2–1.5)

1.5*

(1.3–1.9)

1.4*

(1.2–1.7)

1.4*

(1.3–1.5)

Family economic adversity

1.2*

(1.1–1.4)

1.2

(0.9–1.5)

0.9

(0.7–1.2)

1.2*

(1.0–1.3)

III. Number of maladaptive family functioning childhood adversities

d

124.9*

42.1*

115.0*

193.9*

Zero to one

Two

0.6*

(0.6–0.8)

0.9

(0.8–1.0)

0.7*

(0.6–0.9)

0.7*

(0.7–0.8)

Three

0.4*

(0.4–0.6)

0.7*

(0.5–0.9)

0.4*

(0.3–0.6)

0.5*

(0.4–0.6)

Four

0.3*

(0.2–0.4)

0.5*

(0.3–0.7)

0.3*

(0.2–0.4)

0.3*

(0.3–0.4)

Five

0.2*

(0.1–0.3)

0.3*

(0.2–0.5)

0.2*

(0.1–0.3)

0.2*

(0.2–0.3)

Six

0.1*

(0.1–0.2)

0.2*

(0.1–0.4)

0.2*

(0.1–0.4)

0.1*

(0.1–0.2)

Seven

0.0*

(0.0–0.1)

0.2*

(0.0–0.8)

0.0*

(0.0–0.1)

0.0*

(0.0–0.1)

IV. Number of other childhood adversities

e

14.7*

2.0

0.3

14.3*

Zero to one

Two

0.8*

(0.7–0.9)

0.9

(0.7–1.1)

1.0

(0.8–1.2)

0.8*

(0.8–0.9)

Three

0.7*

(0.6–0.9)

1.0

(0.6–1.8)

1.0

(0.5–1.8)

0.8*

(0.6–0.9)

Four+

0.8

(0.6–1.2)

0.9

(0.6–1.3)

1.1

(0.4–3.5)

0.8

(0.6–1.1)

a. The model is a discrete-time survival model in a logistic regression framework with person-year as the unit of analysis to predict first onset of each of the 20 DSM–IV/CIDI disorders included in the analysis separately in each of three groups of countries. Age at onset was assessed using retrospective reports. Controls were included in the model for respondent age at interview, person-year, country, and type of disorder. The 19 type-of-disorder controls were included because the separate person-year data files for each of the 20 disorders were pooled, thereby forcing the slopes to be constant across disorders within each group of countries. As noted in the text, this assumption was subsequently relaxed and the model was estimated separately for each of four classes of disorders (mood, anxiety, behaviour and substance disorders) and then for each of the 20 separate disorders. Broad consistency of coefficients across these disaggregated models supports the validity of interpreting results pooled across all 20 disorders. The model is significant overall in each of the three groups of countries and overall (χ221 = 534.4–1853.7, P < 0.001). The sample sizes reported are the numbers of respondents who contributed at least one person-year to the data file in each group of countries. The numbers of person-years in the analysis were 18 800 397 for high-income countries, 12 608 715 for high-middle-income countries, 12 193 251 for low/lower-middle-income countries and 43 602 363 for all countries combined. These person-years represent the combination of 20 separate person-year data files, each with a sample size equal to the combined number of years of life of all respondents up to and including their age at onset of the focal disorder for respondents who experienced the disorder and age at interview for respondents who never experienced the disorder. Because of the sample sizes being enormous, a random 5% of observations with a negative score on the outcome were used in the analysis, each such case being assigned a weight of 20 (i.e. 1/.05) to represent the undersampling.

b. For χ2 d.f. = 7.

c. For χ2 d.f. = 5.

d. For χ2 d.f. = 6.

e. For χ2 d.f. = 3.

*Significant at the 0.05 level, two-sided test.

Differential associations of childhood adversities with class of disorder and life-course stage

Disaggregation showed that childhood adversities significantly predict first onset of all classes of disorder in all groups of countries. Childhood adversities associated with maladaptive family functioning had consistently higher odds ratios (interquartile range, IQR = 1.4–2.0) than other childhood adversities (IQR = 1.1–1.3) across classes and groups. Odds ratios associated with the number of maladaptive family functioning childhood adversities were consistently and significantly negative across classes and groups (0.3–1.0 for two to three, 0.1–0.6 for four to five, 0.0–0.4 for six to seven adversities). Odds ratios associated with number of other childhood adversities were less consistent in sign and significance.

Similar results were found for models estimated by life-course stage. As coefficients were quite comparable across the different groups of countries (detailed results are available from the authors on request), we focus on results pooled across all countries (Table 3). Type of childhood adversity had significant and almost entirely positive odds ratios at each life-course stage, including childhood (ages 4–12), adolescence (ages 13–19), young adulthood (ages 20–29) and later adulthood (ages 30+) (χ212 = 197.8–407.5, P<0.001). Odds ratios associated with childhood adversities associated with maladaptive family functioning were generally higher than those associated with other childhood adversities (IQRs of 1.5–1.9 and 1.1–1.3 respectively) and relatively consistent across life-course stage. Odds ratios associated with number of maladaptive family functioning childhood adversities were consistently negative, significant (χ26 = 35.3–119.8, P<0.001), inversely related to number of such adversities (0.4–0.8 for two to three, 0.2–0.4 for four to five and 0.0–0.2 for six to seven adversities) and relatively consistent across life-course stage.

Table 3

Multivariate associations (odds ratios) between childhood adversities and the subsequent first onset of DSM–IV/CIDI disorders in each of four life-course stages based on the final multivariate modela

Childhood, age 4–12 (n = 51 945)

Adolescence, age 13–19 (n = 51 945)

Young adulthood, age 20–29 (n = 41 426)

Later adulthood, age 30+ (

n

= 38 692)

OR

(95% CI)

χ

2

OR

(95% CI)

χ

2

OR

(95% CI)

χ

2

OR

(95% CI)

χ

2

I. Maladaptive family functioning

b

314.2*

205.8*

236.9*

163.2*

Parental mental illness

2.4*

(2.1–2.6)

1.9*

(1.7–2.2)

2.1*

(1.8–2.3)

1.9*

(1.7–2.2)

Parental substance misuse

1.6*

(1.4–1.9)

1.6*

(1.4–1.8)

1.8*

(1.5–2.2)

1.6*

(1.4–1.9)

Parental criminality

1.5*

(1.3–1.8)

1.5*

(1.3–1.8)

1.7*

(1.4–2.0)

1.4*

(1.1–1.7)

Family violence

1.7*

(1.5–1.9)

1.5*

(1.3–1.8)

1.7*

(1.5–1.9)

1.7*

(1.4–2.0)

Physical abuse

2.0*

(1.8–2.2)

2.0*

(1.8–2.2)

1.8*

(1.6–2.1)

1.7*

(1.5–1.9)

Sexual abuse

2.1*

(1.8–2.5)

1.7*

(1.4–2.0)

1.7*

(1.4–2.1)

1.4*

(1.2–1.7)

Neglect

1.5*

(1.4–1.8)

1.5*

(1.3–1.7)

1.7*

(1.5–2.0)

1.4*

(1.2–1.6)

II. Other childhood adversities

c

63.7*

45.7*

30.1*

22.5*

Parental death

1.1*

(1.0–1.2)

1.2*

(1.1–1.3)

1.0

(0.9–1.1)

1.1*

(1.0–1.3)

Parental divorce

1.1

(1.0–1.2)

1.2*

(1.0–1.3)

1.1

(1.0–1.3)

1.0

(0.9–1.2)

Other parental loss

1.3*

(1.2–1.5)

1.3*

(1.2–1.5)

1.5*

(1.3–1.74)

1.3*

(1.2–1.6)

Serious physical illness

1.5*

(1.4–1.7)

1.4*

(1.2–1.6)

1.4*

(1.1–1.7)

1.2*

(1.0–1.4)

Family economic adversity

1.3*

(1.1–1.5)

1.0

(0.9–1.2)

1.1

(0.9–1.4)

1.2

(1.0–1.4)

III. Number of maladaptive family functioning childhood adversities

d

75.5*

119.8*

71.3*

35.3*

Zero to one

Two

0.8*

(0.7–0.9)

0.8*

(0.6–0.9)

0.7*

(0.6–0.8)

0.7*

(0.6–0.8)

Three

0.6*

(0.4–0.7)

0.5*

(0.4–0.7)

0.4*

(0.3–0.5)

0.5*

(0.4–0.7)

Four

0.4*

(0.3–0.5)

0.3*

(0.2–0.5)

0.2*

(0.2–0.4)

0.3*

(0.2–0.5)

Five

0.3*

(0.2–0.4)

0.2*

(0.1–0.3)

0.2*

(0.1–0.3)

0.3*

(0.2–0.6)

Six

0.2*

(0.1–0.3)

0.1*

(0.0–0.1)

0.1*

(0.0–0.2)

0.2*

(0.1–0.4)

Seven

0.1*

(0.0–0.2)

0.0*

(0.0–0.1)

0.0*

(0.0–0.1)

0.1*

(0.0–0.3)

IV. Number of other childhood adversities

e

5.7

10.1*

9.7*

3.6

Zero to one

Two

0.8

(0.8–1.0)

0.8*

(0.7–0.9)

0.8*

(0.6–1.0)

0.8

(0.6–1.0)

Three

0.8

(0.6–1.1)

0.8

(0.5–1.1)

0.6*

(0.4–0.9)

0.8

(0.5–1.3)

Four+

1.2

(0.6–2.0)

0.5*

(0.2–1.0)

0.3*

(0.1–0.8)

0.6

(0.2–1.6)

a. The model is a discrete-time survival model in a logistic regression framework with person-year as the unit of analysis to predict first onset of each of the 20 DSM–IV/CIDI disorders included in the analysis pooled across all countries in each of four sets of person-years that define life-course stages. Age at onset was assessed using retrospective reports. Controls were included in the model for respondent age at interview, person-year, country, and type of disorder. The 19 type-of-disorder controls were included because the separate person-year data files for each of the 20 disorders were pooled, thereby forcing the slopes to be constant across disorders within each age range. As noted in the text, this assumption was subsequently relaxed and the model was estimated separately for each of four classes of disorders (mood, anxiety, behaviour and substance disorders) and then for each of the 20 separate disorders. Broad consistency of coefficients across these disaggregated models supports the validity of interpreting results pooled across all 20 disorders. The model is significant in each life-course stage (χ221 =328.5–1162.6, P < 0.001). The sample sizes reported are the numbers of respondents who contributed at least one person-year to the data file at each of the life-course stages. The numbers decrease with age as some respondents were younger than 20 and even more younger than 30 at the time of interview. The numbers of person-years in the analysis were 9 817 605 for childhood, 7 617 351 for adolescence, 9 459 051 for young adulthood and 16 708 356 for later adulthood. These person-years represent the combination of 20 separate person-year data files, each with a sample size equal to the combined number of years of life of all respondents in the age ranges of the life-course stages described in the column headings, where the upper end of the records are the age at onset of the focal disorder for respondents who experienced the disorder and age at interview for respondents who never experienced the disorder. Because of the sample sizes being enormous, a random 5% of observations with a negative score on the outcome were used in the analysis, each such case being assigned a weight of 20 (i.e. 1/0.05) to represent the undersampling.

b. For χ2 d.f. = 7.

c. For χ2 d.f. = 5.

d. For χ2 d.f. = 6.

e. For χ2 d.f. = 3.

*Significant at the 0.05 level, two-sided test.

Population-attributable risk proportions

Population-attributable risk proportions suggest that eradication of childhood adversities would lead to a 22.9% reduction in mood disorders, 31.0% in anxiety disorders, 41.6% in behaviour disorders, 27.5% in substance disorders and 29.8% of all disorders (Table 4). The higher PARP for behaviour disorders than other disorders exists in all three groups of countries, as is the generally lowest PARP for mood disorders. These differences are partly as a result of PARPs for most disorders being highest in childhood and to a much higher proportion of behaviour disorders than other disorders beginning in childhood.35,36 When we focus exclusively on childhood-onset cases, PARPs for behaviour disorders (50.3–59.0%) are comparable with those for mood (53.8–64.9%) and substance (51.2–65.0%) disorders. Population-attributable risk proportions for mood and behaviour disorders decrease with age in all groups of countries, whereas PARPS remain rather stable after childhood for substance disorders and show less evidence of variation across the age range for anxiety disorders.

Table 4

Population attributable risk proportions (PARPs) of childhood adversities predicting lifetime DSM–IV/CIDI disorders by type of disorder and life-course stagea

Childhood, age 4–12

Adolescence, age 13–19

Early adulthood, age 20–29

Later adulthood, age 30+

Total

I. High-income countries

Mood disorders

57.1

28.8

19.1

13.6

19.7

Anxiety disorders

34.1

29.7

29.6

22.6

30.0

Behaviour disorders

50.3

36.4

b

43.6

Substance disorders

62.4

24.2

25.8

32.4

22.8

All disorders

41.2

30.9

25.3

19.1

28.7

II. High-middle-income countries

Mood disorders

64.9

32.1

26.9

13.5

23.5

Anxiety disorders

31.5

28.4

41.3

25.6

30.0

Behaviour disorders

59.0

40.9

25.3

46.7

Substance disorders

65.0

24.1

29.6

44.2

28.8

All disorders

40.0

30.0

32.1

24.3

30.0

III. Low-/lower-middle-income countries

Mood disorders

53.8

34.7

30.4

19.6

25.6

Anxiety disorders

31.4

28.1

34.0

40.3

29.2

Behaviour disorders

53.7

42.9

19.8

b

43.7

Substance disorders

51.2

32.9

27.7

27.8

29.2

All disorders

33.3

34.7

30.2

27.8

29.9

IV. Total

Mood disorders

59.5

32.6

24.2

13.6

22.9

Anxiety disorders

31.1

30.3

36.7

28.3

31.0

Behaviour disorders

49.6

36.2

17.4

b

41.6

Substance disorders

62.3

30.0

28.9

34.2

27.5

All disorders

38.2

32.3

29.0

21.8

29.8

a. The PARPs were calculated using simulation methods to generate individual-level predicted probabilities of the outcome disorders twice from the coefficients in final model, where these coefficients were estimated separately for each cell of the table. The first time the calculations were made using all the coefficients in the model and the second time assuming that the coefficients associated with the childhood adversities were all zero. One minus the ratio of the predicted prevalence estimates in the two specifications was then used to calculate PARP.

b. Too few onsets occurred at this life-course stage to estimate PARP.

Discussion

Limitations

The results are limited by variation across surveys in language of interview, survey auspice, response rates, field procedures, sample frames (most notably, underrepresentation of rural areas in low- and middle-income countries) and omission of some childhood adversities in some countries. These inconsistencies could increase variation in estimates. However, we estimated models separately by country using only the childhood adversities assessed in that country and found good consistency of results. (Detailed results are available from the authors on request.)

Another limitation is that the WMH surveys did not assess psychosis, which has been found in other research to be significantly related to childhood adversities.3739 Disorder assessment was also limited by focusing exclusively on DSM–IV cases. The DSM categories might not capture the full relevant range of psychopathology in the countries studied. An additional limitation related to measurement is that childhood adversities and disorders were assessed retrospectively. Retrospective recall bias is likely to be conservative, leading to underreporting of both childhood adversities40 and disorders.41 Long-term prospective study is needed to resolve this problem using available prospective data-sets.1,4244 Some interesting preliminary work of this sort has already begun.45

Analyses were limited by not examining patterns separately for men and women or across other important subsamples and by not controlling all unmeasured common causes of childhood adversities and disorders that could induce the associations observed here in the absence of causal effects of childhood adversities. Special caution is needed in interpreting the PARPs because of this limitation, as the actual effects of eradicating childhood adversities could be much lower than those estimated by the PARPs.Within the context of these limitations, the WMH results are consistent with previous studies in suggesting that substantial proportions of children are exposed to childhood adversities. Consistency of WMH exposure rates with those reported in previous studies is difficult to assess precisely, as measurement approaches across studies differ and cannot be compared directly.46 World Mental Health survey respondent reports of parental divorce, the childhood adversity most often found in government statistics, are generally consistent with official estimates.47 World Mental Health survey respondent reports of other childhood adversities such as physical and sexual abuse48 and parental violence,49 however, are lower than in some other surveys. This suggests that WMH estimates might be conservative.

Although early studies on associations between a single childhood adversity and a single mental disorder implied the existence of specificity of effects,50,51 little evidence of specificity was found in the WMH data. The implication is that causal pathways linking childhood adversities to disorders are quite general. Although several recent comparative studies found more evidence for specificity among children and adolescents,5254 those studies focused on prevalent cases, whereas the current analysis focused on first lifetime onsets.

Implications and future research

We showed that childhood adversities often co-occur and that clusters of childhood adversities associated with maladaptive family functioning are linked with the highest risk of mental disorders. We also found generally subadditive effects of multiple childhood adversities associated with maladaptive family functioning. This has important implications for intervention because it means prevention or amelioration of only a single childhood adversity among individuals exposed to many is unlikely to have important effects. Early intervention to reduce exposure to all childhood adversities (e.g. multisystem family therapy, foster care placement) and later intervention to address long-term adult maladaptive psychological and behavioural consequences of having been exposed to childhood adversities would seem to hold the most promise in light of these results.Intervention, of course, requires detection. Screening of youngsters in routine medical settings would seem the easiest approach to detection of severe childhood adversities (e.g. physical/sexual abuse and neglect). Although children are often reluctant to admit these childhood adversities and health professionals are often reluctant to ask, promising approaches have been developed to increase the success of detection based on health worker questioning.55 Although it is less clear whether retrospective detection of childhood adversities in adulthood would have value, the WMH data show that history of childhood adversities predicts disorder onset in adulthood. This is much more striking than showing that childhood adversities continue to be associated with adult prevalence,56,57 and suggests that retrospective detection might help find adults in need of interventions to address the long-term emotional and behavioural consequences of childhood adversities that contribute to their ongoing elevated risk on new onsets.58There is nothing in our retrospective WMH results that addresses the number of hypotheses that could be advanced to explain the patterns documented here.57,59,60 Our results are nonetheless important, in providing empirical justification for further analyses to explore such hypotheses to identify mediators, modifiers and developmental sequences that might be fruitful targets for preventive interventions.61 It would also be useful to examine these associations in an epidemiological sample that had a genetically informative design to investigate the extent to which exposure and reactivity to childhood adversities are under genetic control. Consistent with other recent research,38 it would also be useful to study genetic influences on inter-generational continuity of childhood adversities exposure. A new WMH initiative is collecting saliva samples from respondents in close to a dozen different WMH surveys in order to allow genetic studies of this sort to be carried out.

Link to Article

Abstract

Background Although significant associations of childhood adversities with adult mental disorders are widely documented, most studies focus on single childhood adversities predicting single disorders. Aims To examine joint associations of 12 childhood adversities with first onset of 20 DSM–IV disorders in World Mental Health (WMH) Surveys in 21 countries. Method Nationally or regionally representative surveys of 51 945 adults assessed childhood adversities and lifetime DSM–IV disorders with the WHO Composite International Diagnostic Interview (CIDI). Results Childhood adversities were highly prevalent and interrelated. Childhood adversities associated with maladaptive family functioning (e.g. parental mental illness, child abuse, neglect) were the strongest predictors of disorders. Co-occurring childhood adversities associated with maladaptive family functioning had significant subadditive predictive associations and little specificity across disorders. Childhood adversities account for 29.8% of all disorders across countries. Conclusions Childhood adversities have strong associations with all classes of disorders at all life-course stages in all groups of WMH countries. Long-term association.

summary

Introduction

Extensive epidemiological research demonstrates a strong correlation between retrospectively reported childhood adversities and adult mental disorders.[1–6] However, most studies have methodological limitations, such as focusing on single adversities,[7,8] using composite measures that mask individual effects,[9] or neglecting cross-national comparisons and variations in effects over the lifespan.[10–15] This study addresses these limitations by investigating the prevalence and associations of retrospectively reported childhood adversities with the first onset of various mental disorders across the life course. Data are drawn from 21 countries participating in the World Health Organization (WHO) World Mental Health (WMH) Survey Initiative.[16]

Method

Sample

The WMH surveys were conducted in 21 countries representing a range of income levels: nine high-income, six high-middle income, and six low/lower-middle income countries (online Table DS1).[17] A total of 51,945 adults (age 18 and older) participated, with most samples being nationally representative. However, some focused on urban areas or selected states/metropolitan areas. Informed consent was obtained from all participants, and ethical approval was granted by relevant institutional review boards. Weighted response rates averaged 73.1% (range 45.9–98.8). Details regarding WMH methodology are published elsewhere.[18]

Measures

Mental disorders

The WHO Composite International Diagnostic Interview (CIDI) Version 3.0,[19] a fully structured lay-administered interview, was used to assess mental disorders. This instrument diagnoses 20 common mood, anxiety, behavior, and substance disorders based on DSM–IV criteria.[20] Diagnostic hierarchy and organic exclusion rules were applied. Previous validation studies demonstrated good concordance between CIDI diagnoses and those derived from the Structured Clinical Interview for DSM–IV (SCID).[21,22] Age at first onset of lifetime disorders was assessed retrospectively using a validated question sequence designed to enhance accuracy.[23]

Childhood adversities

Twelve dichotomously scored childhood adversities experienced before age 18 were assessed, encompassing three categories: interpersonal loss (parental death, divorce, other separation), parental maladjustment (mental illness, substance misuse, criminality, violence), and maltreatment (physical abuse, sexual abuse, neglect). Additional adversities included life-threatening respondent physical illness and family economic adversity. Measurement instruments included established scales and questions used in prior epidemiological studies.[10,11,24–29]

Due to cultural sensitivities, some countries omitted specific adversities. To maximize data utilization, dummy variables were included to indicate assessment status, and multiple imputation addressed missing individual-level data.[30] This approach assumes similar correlates of missing adversities across countries, acknowledging potential limitations in accuracy.

Analysis methods

Tetrachoric factor analysis examined associations among childhood adversities. Discrete-time survival analysis with person-year as the unit of analysis[31] was employed to investigate multivariate associations of childhood adversities with first onset of DSM–IV/CIDI disorders. The analysis controlled for respondent demographics and prior disorders, with the Akaike information criterion (AIC)[32] used for model selection. Subgroup analyses by life-course stage and disorder class were conducted. Exponentiated survival coefficients yielded odds ratios (ORs) and 95% confidence intervals (CIs). Population-attributable risk proportions (PARPs) were calculated to estimate the potential impact of eliminating childhood adversities on disorder prevalence.[33] Analyses incorporated sampling weights and clustering, utilizing the Taylor series method[34] in SUDAAN (version 8.0.1).

Results

Prevalence and structure of childhood adversities

Prevalence of any childhood adversity was similar across income groups (38.4–39.1%) (Table 1). Parental death was most common (11.0–14.8%), followed by physical abuse (5.3–10.8%), family violence (4.2–7.8%), and parental mental illness (5.3–6.7%). Multiple adversities were frequent (59.3–66.2%), with a mean of 2.5–2.9 among those experiencing two or more.

Table 1

Prevalence of childhood adversities in World Mental Health (WMH) surveys carried out in high-, high-middle-, and low/lower-middle-income countries

a. Prevalence estimates in the last five rows represent the proportions of all respondents with any childhood adversity who have exactly one, two, three, four, five or more. These five proportions sum to 100% in each column.

Tetrachoric correlations between adversity pairs were predominantly positive, with medians ranging from 0.17 to 0.27 across income groups. Factor analysis revealed a strong factor representing maladaptive family functioning (parental mental illness, substance misuse, criminality, violence, physical/sexual abuse, neglect).

Associations of childhood adversities with DSM–IV/CIDI disorders

In bivariate analyses, all 12 adversities were significantly associated with elevated risk of DSM–IV disorders (ORs 1.1–2.0). Multivariate models adjusting for all adversities showed attenuated but still significant associations, particularly for those reflecting maladaptive family functioning (ORs 1.1–1.6). Models considering both type and number of adversities demonstrated the best fit, revealing a significant interaction effect.

As shown in Table 2, adversities associated with maladaptive family functioning consistently predicted increased disorder risk across country groups (ORs 1.3–2.4), while associations for other adversities were weaker and less consistent (ORs 0.9–1.5). Notably, increasing numbers of maladaptive family functioning adversities were associated with a significant, negative, and inversely related pattern of ORs, indicating a diminishing impact with greater adversity accumulation.

Table 2

Multivariate associations (odds ratios) between childhood adversities and the subsequent first onset of DSM–IV/CIDI disorders based on the final multivariate modela

a. The model is a discrete-time survival model in a logistic regression framework with person-year as the unit of analysis to predict first onset of each of the 20 DSM–IV/CIDI disorders included in the analysis separately in each of three groups of countries. Age at onset was assessed using retrospective reports. Controls were included in the model for respondent age at interview, person-year, country, and type of disorder. The 19 type-of-disorder controls were included because the separate person-year data files for each of the 20 disorders were pooled, thereby forcing the slopes to be constant across disorders within each group of countries. As noted in the text, this assumption was subsequently relaxed and the model was estimated separately for each of four classes of disorders (mood, anxiety, behaviour and substance disorders) and then for each of the 20 separate disorders. Broad consistency of coefficients across these disaggregated models supports the validity of interpreting results pooled across all 20 disorders. The model is significant overall in each of the three groups of countries and overall (χ221 = 534.4–1853.7, P < 0.001). The sample sizes reported are the numbers of respondents who contributed at least one person-year to the data file in each group of countries. The numbers of person-years in the analysis were 18 800 397 for high-income countries, 12 608 715 for high-middle-income countries, 12 193 251 for low/lower-middle-income countries and 43 602 363 for all countries combined. These person-years represent the combination of 20 separate person-year data files, each with a sample size equal to the combined number of years of life of all respondents up to and including their age at onset of the focal disorder for respondents who experienced the disorder and age at interview for respondents who never experienced the disorder. Because of the sample sizes being enormous, a random 5% of observations with a negative score on the outcome were used in the analysis, each such case being assigned a weight of 20 (i.e. 1/.05) to represent the undersampling.

b. For χ2 d.f. = 7.

c. For χ2 d.f. = 5.

d. For χ2 d.f. = 6.

e. For χ2 d.f. = 3.

*Significant at the 0.05 level, two-sided test.

Differential associations of childhood adversities with class of disorder and life-course stage

Disaggregated analyses consistently showed significant associations between childhood adversities and first onset of all disorder classes across country groups. Maladaptive family functioning adversities consistently exhibited stronger associations (ORs 1.4–2.0) than other adversities (ORs 1.1–1.3).

Similar patterns were observed across life-course stages (Table 3). Adversity type significantly predicted disorder onset across childhood, adolescence, young adulthood, and later adulthood, with stronger effects for maladaptive family functioning adversities. The negative, inversely related pattern of ORs associated with increasing numbers of these adversities persisted across life stages.

Table 3

Multivariate associations (odds ratios) between childhood adversities and the subsequent first onset of DSM–IV/CIDI disorders in each of four life-course stages based on the final multivariate modela

a. The model is a discrete-time survival model in a logistic regression framework with person-year as the unit of analysis to predict first onset of each of the 20 DSM–IV/CIDI disorders included in the analysis pooled across all countries in each of four sets of person-years that define life-course stages. Age at onset was assessed using retrospective reports. Controls were included in the model for respondent age at interview, person-year, country, and type of disorder. The 19 type-of-disorder controls were included because the separate person-year data files for each of the 20 disorders were pooled, thereby forcing the slopes to be constant across disorders within each age range. As noted in the text, this assumption was subsequently relaxed and the model was estimated separately for each of four classes of disorders (mood, anxiety, behaviour and substance disorders) and then for each of the 20 separate disorders. Broad consistency of coefficients across these disaggregated models supports the validity of interpreting results pooled across all 20 disorders. The model is significant in each life-course stage (χ221 =328.5–1162.6, P < 0.001). The sample sizes reported are the numbers of respondents who contributed at least one person-year to the data file at each of the life-course stages. The numbers decrease with age as some respondents were younger than 20 and even more younger than 30 at the time of interview. The numbers of person-years in the analysis were 9 817 605 for childhood, 7 617 351 for adolescence, 9 459 051 for young adulthood and 16 708 356 for later adulthood. These person-years represent the combination of 20 separate person-year data files, each with a sample size equal to the combined number of years of life of all respondents in the age ranges of the life-course stages described in the column headings, where the upper end of the records are the age at onset of the focal disorder for respondents who experienced the disorder and age at interview for respondents who never experienced the disorder. Because of the sample sizes being enormous, a random 5% of observations with a negative score on the outcome were used in the analysis, each such case being assigned a weight of 20 (i.e. 1/0.05) to represent the undersampling.

b. For χ2 d.f. = 7.

c. For χ2 d.f. = 5.

d. For χ2 d.f. = 6.

e. For χ2 d.f. = 3.

*Significant at the 0.05 level, two-sided test.

Population-attributable risk proportions

Estimated PARPs indicated that eliminating childhood adversities could substantially reduce the prevalence of mental disorders: mood disorders (22.9%), anxiety disorders (31.0%), behavior disorders (41.6%), substance disorders (27.5%), and all disorders combined (29.8%) (Table 4). The higher PARP for behavior disorders was observed across country groups and was partly attributable to a higher proportion of childhood-onset cases for this disorder class. PARPs generally decreased with age for mood and behavior disorders, while remaining relatively stable for substance disorders and showing less variation for anxiety disorders.

Table 4

Population attributable risk proportions (PARPs) of childhood adversities predicting lifetime DSM–IV/CIDI disorders by type of disorder and life-course stagea

a. The PARPs were calculated using simulation methods to generate individual-level predicted probabilities of the outcome disorders twice from the coefficients in final model, where these coefficients were estimated separately for each cell of the table. The first time the calculations were made using all the coefficients in the model and the second time assuming that the coefficients associated with the childhood adversities were all zero. One minus the ratio of the predicted prevalence estimates in the two specifications was then used to calculate PARP.

b. Too few onsets occurred at this life-course stage to estimate PARP.

Discussion

Limitations

Several limitations should be considered when interpreting these findings. Cross-survey variations in methodology, sampling, and measurement may have introduced variability in estimates. However, separate analyses by country yielded consistent results. The study's reliance on retrospective reporting introduces potential recall bias, likely leading to underestimation of both adversities and disorders.[40,41] Longitudinal studies are necessary to confirm these findings. Additionally, the study did not assess psychosis, a disorder linked to childhood adversities in other research.[37–39] The use of DSM-IV criteria may not fully capture psychopathology across diverse cultural contexts. Finally, the study could not control for all potential confounders, and the PARP estimates should be interpreted cautiously as the true impact of eradicating childhood adversities might be lower.

Implications and future research

The WMH findings corroborate prior research, highlighting the high prevalence of childhood adversities and their significant associations with mental disorders across the life course. Notably, the study emphasizes the detrimental impact of maladaptive family functioning, underscoring the need for comprehensive interventions targeting multiple adversities rather than isolated factors.

Future research should employ prospective designs to minimize recall bias and explore potential mediating and moderating factors in the relationship between childhood adversities and mental disorders. Investigating genetic influences on adversity exposure and reactivity, as well as intergenerational transmission patterns, could further inform targeted interventions. The ongoing collection of genetic data in the WMH initiative will facilitate such investigations.

Link to Article

Abstract

Background Although significant associations of childhood adversities with adult mental disorders are widely documented, most studies focus on single childhood adversities predicting single disorders. Aims To examine joint associations of 12 childhood adversities with first onset of 20 DSM–IV disorders in World Mental Health (WMH) Surveys in 21 countries. Method Nationally or regionally representative surveys of 51 945 adults assessed childhood adversities and lifetime DSM–IV disorders with the WHO Composite International Diagnostic Interview (CIDI). Results Childhood adversities were highly prevalent and interrelated. Childhood adversities associated with maladaptive family functioning (e.g. parental mental illness, child abuse, neglect) were the strongest predictors of disorders. Co-occurring childhood adversities associated with maladaptive family functioning had significant subadditive predictive associations and little specificity across disorders. Childhood adversities account for 29.8% of all disorders across countries. Conclusions Childhood adversities have strong associations with all classes of disorders at all life-course stages in all groups of WMH countries. Long-term association.

summary

Introduction

Lots of research shows a link between rough childhood experiences (like abuse or neglect) and mental health problems in adulthood. But most studies look at just one bad experience at a time or lump them all together. This makes it hard to see how different types of childhood adversity might affect people differently. Also, we don't know enough about how these links play out across a lifespan or vary across the world. This study looks at these issues by analyzing data from 21 countries involved in the World Health Organization's World Mental Health Survey.

Method

Sample

The study included 51,945 adults from 21 countries. These countries were grouped by income level: high, high-middle, and low/lower-middle. Most samples were representative of the whole country, while some focused on urban areas. After getting consent, participants were interviewed, and the data was adjusted to reflect each country's demographics. About 73% of people invited to participate completed the survey.

Measures

Mental Disorders

Researchers used a structured interview to diagnose 20 common mental disorders, such as depression, anxiety, ADHD, and substance abuse. The interview was designed for use by trained interviewers and followed the guidelines of the DSM-IV. The age when these disorders first appeared was also determined through the interview.

Childhood Adversities

Participants answered questions about 12 specific types of hardship before age 18. These included things like a parent dying, parental divorce, experiencing or witnessing violence, abuse, neglect, family illness, and economic hardship. Some questions about sensitive topics like sexual abuse were not asked in every country. To address this, the researchers used statistical methods to estimate the missing information, based on the data available.

Analysis Methods

Researchers used statistical techniques to understand the relationships between different types of childhood adversity and their link to mental disorders. They also looked at how these relationships changed over different life stages (childhood, adolescence, adulthood) and varied across countries. Finally, they estimated how much different mental disorders could be prevented if childhood adversity was eliminated.

Results

Prevalence and Structure of Childhood Adversities

About 39% of people in the study experienced at least one childhood adversity, regardless of their country's income level. Death of a parent was most common (11-15%), followed by physical abuse (5-11%) and family violence (4-8%). Many people experienced more than one type of adversity.

The study found that parental mental illness, substance abuse, criminal behavior, domestic violence, and physical and sexual abuse tend to happen together, suggesting that these adversities often occur within the context of a troubled family environment.

Associations of Childhood Adversities with DSM–IV/CIDI Disorders

All 12 adversities were linked to a higher risk of mental disorders. Adversities that clustered around troubled families were associated with the highest risk. The more adversities a person experienced, the higher their risk of mental disorders, but this increase in risk became smaller with each additional adversity.

Differential Associations of Childhood Adversities with Class of Disorder and Life-course Stage

The link between childhood adversity and mental disorders held true across different types of mental disorders (like mood disorders, anxiety disorders, etc.) and different life stages. Adversities related to troubled families had a stronger link to mental disorders across the board.

Population-attributable Risk Proportions

The study estimated that eliminating childhood adversities could lead to significant reductions in the number of people who develop mental disorders: 23% for mood disorders, 31% for anxiety disorders, 42% for behavioral disorders, and 28% for substance use disorders. These numbers highlight the large impact that childhood adversity has on mental health.

Discussion

Limitations

The study has some limitations. Differences in the way the surveys were carried out across countries might have affected the results. Also, the study did not include some serious mental illnesses like psychosis. Importantly, because the study relied on people's memories of past experiences, there is a chance that some adversities or mental disorders were not reported accurately.

Implications and Future Research

This study shows that childhood adversities are common, often occur together, and are strongly associated with a range of mental disorders across the lifespan. The findings suggest that preventing even one type of adversity within troubled families could significantly improve children's mental health. Early detection and intervention for families facing multiple challenges are crucial.

Future research is needed to understand the specific ways in which childhood adversities lead to mental health problems and to identify the most effective prevention and intervention strategies. Additionally, investigating the role of genetics in a person's vulnerability to the negative impacts of childhood adversity is an important area for future study.

Link to Article

Abstract

Background Although significant associations of childhood adversities with adult mental disorders are widely documented, most studies focus on single childhood adversities predicting single disorders. Aims To examine joint associations of 12 childhood adversities with first onset of 20 DSM–IV disorders in World Mental Health (WMH) Surveys in 21 countries. Method Nationally or regionally representative surveys of 51 945 adults assessed childhood adversities and lifetime DSM–IV disorders with the WHO Composite International Diagnostic Interview (CIDI). Results Childhood adversities were highly prevalent and interrelated. Childhood adversities associated with maladaptive family functioning (e.g. parental mental illness, child abuse, neglect) were the strongest predictors of disorders. Co-occurring childhood adversities associated with maladaptive family functioning had significant subadditive predictive associations and little specificity across disorders. Childhood adversities account for 29.8% of all disorders across countries. Conclusions Childhood adversities have strong associations with all classes of disorders at all life-course stages in all groups of WMH countries. Long-term association.

summary

Introduction

Lots of studies have shown that bad experiences during childhood are linked to mental health problems in adulthood. However, most of these studies either focused on one specific type of negative experience or grouped all types together. This makes it hard to understand how different negative experiences might affect people in different ways. This new study tries to address these limitations by looking at a wide range of negative childhood experiences and how they are linked to different mental disorders throughout life. The study used data from people in 21 different countries who participated in surveys conducted by the World Health Organization (WHO).

Method

Sample

The WHO surveys included over 50,000 adults from 21 countries. These countries were grouped by income level: high, high-middle, and low/lower-middle. Most of the surveys were designed to represent the entire population of each country. However, some focused only on people living in urban areas or specific regions. Everyone in the study agreed to participate and provided informed consent.

Measures

Mental disorders

The surveys used a structured interview to diagnose 20 common mental disorders. These disorders were grouped into categories: mood disorders (like depression), anxiety disorders (like phobias), behavioral disorders (like ADHD), and substance use disorders. The interview helped determine when each disorder first started in a person's life.

Childhood adversities

The surveys asked about 12 different types of negative childhood experiences:

  • Loss: Death of a parent, divorce of parents, other separation from parents

  • Parental problems: Mental illness, substance abuse, criminal behavior, violence

  • Abuse and neglect: Physical abuse, sexual abuse, neglect

  • Other: Life-threatening illness, family financial hardship

It's important to note that not all surveys asked about every type of negative experience. For example, some countries decided not to ask about sexual abuse because they thought it might make people uncomfortable. To address this, the researchers used statistical methods to fill in missing information where possible.

Analysis methods

The researchers used statistical methods to study:

  • How often the different negative childhood experiences happened together

  • How strongly each negative experience was linked to the later development of mental disorders.

  • The potential impact of eliminating negative childhood experiences on rates of mental disorders.

Results

Prevalence and structure of childhood adversities

The study found that around 39% of people in all three income groups experienced at least one negative childhood experience. Parental death was the most common (11-15%), followed by physical abuse (5-11%), family violence (4-8%), and parental mental illness (5-7%). Importantly, many people experienced more than one type of negative experience.

The study also found that experiences related to unhealthy family environments (like parental mental illness, substance abuse, criminal behavior, violence, and abuse) often happened together.

Associations of childhood adversities with DSM–IV/CIDI disorders

All 12 types of negative childhood experiences were linked to a higher risk of developing mental disorders. Experiences related to unhealthy family environments were associated with the strongest links. The more of these experiences someone had, the greater their risk of developing a mental disorder.

Differential associations of childhood adversities with class of disorder and life-course stage

The link between negative childhood experiences and mental disorders was found for all types of disorders and across all income levels. Generally, experiences related to unhealthy family environments were associated with a higher risk for all disorders. The link between these experiences and mental disorders was also present across different life stages, meaning they were linked to disorders starting in childhood, adolescence, young adulthood, and later adulthood.

Population-attributable risk proportions

The study estimated that if negative childhood experiences were completely eliminated, there would be a significant reduction in rates of different mental disorders: mood disorders (23% reduction), anxiety disorders (31%), behavioral disorders (42%), and substance use disorders (28%).

Discussion

Limitations

This study has limitations to consider:

  • The surveys were done in different languages and settings, and some questions were not asked in every country. This could make the results less accurate.

  • The study did not include some serious mental disorders, like psychosis.

  • The information about negative experiences and mental disorders was based on people's memories, which may not be perfect.

  • There might be other factors, not measured in the study, that could explain the link between negative experiences and mental disorders.

Implications and future research

This study tells us that:

  • Negative childhood experiences are quite common.

  • Many people experience multiple types of negative experiences, particularly those related to unhealthy family environments.

  • These experiences are strongly linked to a higher risk of developing mental disorders across the lifespan and across different cultures.

  • Preventing negative experiences could significantly reduce the number of people who develop mental disorders.

More research is needed to understand how to best prevent these negative experiences and how to help people who have experienced them. The researchers are planning to investigate these questions in future studies.

Link to Article

Abstract

Background Although significant associations of childhood adversities with adult mental disorders are widely documented, most studies focus on single childhood adversities predicting single disorders. Aims To examine joint associations of 12 childhood adversities with first onset of 20 DSM–IV disorders in World Mental Health (WMH) Surveys in 21 countries. Method Nationally or regionally representative surveys of 51 945 adults assessed childhood adversities and lifetime DSM–IV disorders with the WHO Composite International Diagnostic Interview (CIDI). Results Childhood adversities were highly prevalent and interrelated. Childhood adversities associated with maladaptive family functioning (e.g. parental mental illness, child abuse, neglect) were the strongest predictors of disorders. Co-occurring childhood adversities associated with maladaptive family functioning had significant subadditive predictive associations and little specificity across disorders. Childhood adversities account for 29.8% of all disorders across countries. Conclusions Childhood adversities have strong associations with all classes of disorders at all life-course stages in all groups of WMH countries. Long-term association.

summary

Introduction

Lots of studies have shown that if you experience bad things as a kid, you're more likely to have problems with your mental health as an adult. But most of these studies only looked at one bad thing at a time, or they lumped all the bad things together. This makes it hard to see how different bad experiences might affect mental health in different ways. Our study tries to solve this problem by looking at how common these bad experiences are and how they're linked to different mental health problems throughout people's lives. We used information from 21 countries that were part of a big project by the World Health Organization (WHO).

Method

Sample

We talked to 51,945 adults from 21 different countries. Some countries were rich, some were kind of in the middle, and some were not so rich. Most of the people we talked to were randomly chosen from all over their country, but in some countries, we mostly talked to people living in cities. Everyone knew we were doing a study and agreed to answer our questions. We also made sure to account for differences in how people were chosen and made sure our group of people looked like each country as a whole. Almost everyone answered our questions - about 73%! You can read more about how the WHO study worked somewhere else.

Measures

Mental disorders

We used a special survey called the CIDI to figure out if people had any of 20 common mental health problems. These problems were grouped into mood problems (like being really sad or really happy for no reason), anxiety problems (like feeling super worried or scared), behavior problems (like having trouble paying attention or always getting in trouble), and substance problems (like not being able to stop drinking alcohol or taking drugs). We used the answers from the survey to decide if people met the rules for having each problem. We also asked people when these problems started in their lives.

Childhood adversities

We asked people about 12 bad things that can happen before you turn 18:

  • Losing a parent: This could be because a parent died, because parents got divorced, or because a kid had to live away from their parents for some other reason.

  • Parents having problems: This could be things like parents having a mental illness, drinking or taking drugs too much, breaking the law, or being violent.

  • Bad treatment: This includes being physically hurt, being forced to do sexual things, or not having enough food, clothes, or medical care.

  • Other bad things: This includes being very sick as a child or not having enough money in the family.

Some countries didn't want to ask about certain bad things because they thought it would make people uncomfortable. But we still wanted to include those countries in our study! So we used a special technique to fill in the missing information.

Analysis methods

We used special math formulas to see how these 12 bad things were related to each other. We also used math formulas to see how likely people were to have mental health problems based on how many and what types of bad things happened to them. We even looked at this across different ages and for different groups of mental health problems. We also looked at how many mental health problems might go away if nobody had to experience bad things as kids. Since we had so much information, we used a special computer program called SUDAAN to help us with all the calculations.

Results

How common were these bad things, and how were they related?

It didn't matter if a country was rich or not, about the same number of people said they experienced bad things as a kid (around 39%). The most common bad thing was a parent dying (11-15%), and many people experienced more than one bad thing (59-66%).

We found that most of the bad things were related to each other. For example, if someone experienced one bad thing, they were more likely to experience others too. The bad things related to families not working well together (like parents having problems or kids being treated badly) were very connected.

Did experiencing bad things make people more likely to have mental health problems?

Yes. All 12 bad things made people more likely to have mental health problems. Things that were related to families not working well together seemed to have a bigger impact than other bad things. And the more bad things someone experienced, the more likely they were to have mental health problems. This was true for all the different types of mental health problems and all the countries in our study!

Were certain bad things linked to certain mental health problems?

Bad things related to families not working well seemed to be connected to all types of mental health problems. We also found that people were more likely to have mental problems at all ages if they experienced these bad things as a kid.

What would happen if nobody experienced bad things?

We found that if no kids experienced these bad things, the number of people with mental health problems would go down a lot! For example, mood problems might go down by 23%, anxiety problems by 31%, behavior problems by 42%, and substance problems by 28%!

Discussion

Limitations

It's important to remember that our study has limitations. For example, we asked people to remember things that happened a long time ago, so they may not have remembered perfectly. We also weren't able to look at every mental health problem, and we mostly talked to people in cities.

What does this mean, and what's next?

Our study showed that experiencing bad things as a kid is very common and can have a big impact on mental health. This is important because it means we need to find ways to help kids avoid these bad experiences in the first place. It also means we need to find ways to help people who have already experienced these things. We need to do more research to figure out the best ways to do this. For example, it would be helpful to find out why these bad experiences lead to mental health problems and if there are ways to stop this from happening.

Link to Article

Footnotes and Citation

Cite

Kessler, R. C., McLaughlin, K. A., Green, J. G., Gruber, M. J., Sampson, N. A., Zaslavsky, A. M., ... & Williams, D. R. (2010). Childhood adversities and adult psychopathology in the WHO World Mental Health Surveys. The British Journal of Psychiatry, 197(5), 378-385. https://doi.org/doi:10.1192/bjp.bp.110.080499

    Highlights