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Journal Article

Citation

Power C, Li L, Pinto Pereira SM. Longit. Life Course Stud. 2020; 11(4): 431-458.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2020, Society for Longitudinal and Life Course Studies, Publisher Bristol University Press)

DOI

10.1332/175795920X15891281805890

PMID

33149766 PMCID

Abstract

Childhood maltreatment types (neglect and psychological, physical, or sexual abuse) are associated with many poor outcomes in adulthood. Yet, research mainly focuses on the cumulative adversity burden rather than specificities and commonalities of associations with adult outcomes and intervening pathways. To build understanding of life-course pathways to a range of outcomes, this overview summarises evidence from several original research studies using the 1958 British Birth Cohort on specific maltreatment types, child development trajectories, adult intermediaries and outcomes. About one-in-five participants were identified as neglected or abused in childhood (~10% were identified for neglect, 10% for psychological abuse, 6% for physical abuse and 1.4% for sexual abuse). Neglect was associated with key dimensions of development, for example, slower height growth, delayed maturation, faster BMI gain, and poorer emotional and cognitive development. Associated adulthood outcomes included harmful behaviours (notably smoking), poorer physical health (e.g. shorter height, excess BMI, poorer blood lipids and glucose, poor-rated health and physical functioning), worse mental health, lower socioeconomic circumstances (e.g. poorer living conditions) and elevated mortality in mid-adulthood. Childhood abuse associations were less widespread and were often only for specific types: most types were unrelated to childhood height and cognitive abilities, but all types were associated with poorer child emotional development, adult mental health, smoking, blood lipids and self-rated health. Additionally, physical abuse was associated with faster BMI gain, higher adult BMI, blood glucose, inflammation and mortality in mid-adulthood; sexual abuse with faster BMI gain, higher adult BMI, poor physical functioning at 50y and higher mortality in mid-adulthood. Adult health measures associated with neglect and abuse are key predictors of serious disease, disability and death. Therefore, neglect and abuse associations with these measures represent an important burden for individuals and society.


Language: en

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