Credit: iStock
(Medical Xpress)—Adults who were maltreated as children are more likely than adults who were not maltreated to develop psychiatric disorders, including depression, anxiety and substance abuse. Based on a review of the literature examining maltreatment as a risk factor for these disorders, HMS researchers at McLean Hospital have concluded that these disorders emerge earlier in people who were abused, with greater severity, more comorbidity and a less favorable response to treatment.
Maltreatment is characterized by sustained or repeated exposure to events that usually involve a betrayal of trust. "Active" examples are childhood sexual and physical abuse as well as some forms of emotional abuse. "Passive" examples are emotional and physical neglect.
"It is maltreatment rather than exposure to other stressors, such as natural disasters, which consistently presents as the antecedent to psychopathology," said Jacqueline Samson, HMS assistant professor of psychology at McLean. She and Martin Teicher, associate professor of psychiatry at McLean, are co-authors of the review published in the October issue of The American Journal of Psychiatry.
"This is likely due to the fact that children are dependent on the adults around them for their survival, and they can endure great hardship if they feel protected and cared for. But when the hardship is the product of their caretakers, and when it is the caretaker who must be protected against, it creates a stressor with far-reaching ramifications," Samson said.
Childhood maltreatment is linked to a wide array of medical disorders, shortened life expectancy and chromosomal abnormalities. Imaging findings associated with psychiatric disorders, such as reduced hippocampal volume and amygdala hyper-reactivity, are more consistently observed in maltreated individuals and may represent a maltreatment-related risk factor. Hence, an understanding of maltreatment as a risk factor is crucial to the development of a science of preventive psychiatry, to the design of effective therapeutic regimens and to the delineation of disease study, the authors argued.
"Further study will be needed to determine what treatments may be most effective for patients with a history of childhood maltreatment, but for now, these findings strongly suggest that all DSM diagnoses be accompanied by a specifier notation to indicate the presence of childhood maltreatment when it exists," Samson said, referring to the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Psychiatric Disorders. "It also suggests that studies of treatment outcome and correlates of psychopathology include childhood maltreatment as a factor."
Explore further: Child maltreatment increases risk of adult obesity
More information: ajp.psychiatryonline.org/article.aspx?articleID=1733358
Medical Xpress on facebook
Related Stories
Child maltreatment increases risk of adult obesity
May 21, 2013
Children who have suffered maltreatment are 36% more likely to be obese in adulthood compared to non-maltreated children, according to a new study by King's College London. The authors estimate that the prevention or effective ...
Child maltreatment linked to mental and physical health disorders in later life
Nov 28, 2012
(Medical Xpress)—Child physical abuse, emotional abuse and neglect is linked to mental health disorders, drug use, suicide attempts, sexually transmitted infections and risky sexual behaviour in adulthood, according to ...
Childhood maltreatment linked to long-term depression risk and poor response to treatment
Aug 14, 2011
People who have experienced maltreatment as children are twice as likely to develop both multiple and long-lasting depressive episodes as those without a history of childhood maltreatment, according to a new study. The research, ...
Maternal posttraumatic stress disorder associated with increased risk for child maltreatment
Sep 02, 2013
Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) in mothers appears to be associated with an increased risk for child maltreatment beyond that associated with maternal depression, according to a study published by JAMA Pediatrics.
Highlighting molecular clues to the link between childhood maltreatment and later suicide
Jul 03, 2012
Exposure to childhood maltreatment increases the risk for most psychiatric disorders as well as many negative consequences of these conditions. This new study, by Dr. Gustavo Turecki and colleagues at McGill University, Canada, ...
Recommended for you
'Brain training' may boost working memory, but not intelligence
2 hours ago
Brain training games, apps, and websites are popular and it's not hard to see why—who wouldn't want to give their mental abilities a boost? New research suggests that brain training programs might strengthen your ability ...
Babies learn to anticipate touch in the womb
11 hours ago
Babies learn how to anticipate touch while in the womb, according to new research by Durham and Lancaster universities.
Wedded bliss or blues? Scientists link DNA to marital satisfaction
14 hours ago
What makes some people more prone to wedded bliss or sorrow than others? Researchers at UC Berkeley and Northwestern University have found a major clue in our DNA. A gene involved in the regulation of serotonin ...
Researchers test biofeedback device in lowering grandmothers' stress
16 hours ago
In a pilot study by Case Western Reserve University's Frances Payne Bolton School of Nursing, 20 grandmothers were able to lower their stress levels with a biofeedback device that tracks breathing patterns.
Study casts light on addressing domestic violence among female US veterans
16 hours ago
A new study, published in Springer's Journal of Family Violence, casts light on how health care providers respond to the emotional, sexual and physical violence that female veterans sometimes experience at the hands of the ...
How do stress hormones during pregnancy predict adult nicotine addiction?
19 hours ago
Adult women whose mothers had increased levels of stress hormones while they were pregnant are at greater risk of becoming addicted to nicotine, according to a new study led by a Miriam Hospital researcher.
User comments
© Medical Xpress 2011-2013, Phys.org network
Credit: iStock
(Medical Xpress)—Adults who were maltreated as children are more likely than adults who were not maltreated to develop psychiatric disorders, including depression, anxiety and substance abuse. Based on a review of the literature examining maltreatment as a risk factor for these disorders, HMS researchers at McLean Hospital have concluded that these disorders emerge earlier in people who were abused, with greater severity, more comorbidity and a less favorable response to treatment.
Maltreatment is characterized by sustained or repeated exposure to events that usually involve a betrayal of trust. "Active" examples are childhood sexual and physical abuse as well as some forms of emotional abuse. "Passive" examples are emotional and physical neglect.
"It is maltreatment rather than exposure to other stressors, such as natural disasters, which consistently presents as the antecedent to psychopathology," said Jacqueline Samson, HMS assistant professor of psychology at McLean. She and Martin Teicher, associate professor of psychiatry at McLean, are co-authors of the review published in the October issue of The American Journal of Psychiatry.
"This is likely due to the fact that children are dependent on the adults around them for their survival, and they can endure great hardship if they feel protected and cared for. But when the hardship is the product of their caretakers, and when it is the caretaker who must be protected against, it creates a stressor with far-reaching ramifications," Samson said.
Childhood maltreatment is linked to a wide array of medical disorders, shortened life expectancy and chromosomal abnormalities. Imaging findings associated with psychiatric disorders, such as reduced hippocampal volume and amygdala hyper-reactivity, are more consistently observed in maltreated individuals and may represent a maltreatment-related risk factor. Hence, an understanding of maltreatment as a risk factor is crucial to the development of a science of preventive psychiatry, to the design of effective therapeutic regimens and to the delineation of disease study, the authors argued.
"Further study will be needed to determine what treatments may be most effective for patients with a history of childhood maltreatment, but for now, these findings strongly suggest that all DSM diagnoses be accompanied by a specifier notation to indicate the presence of childhood maltreatment when it exists," Samson said, referring to the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Psychiatric Disorders. "It also suggests that studies of treatment outcome and correlates of psychopathology include childhood maltreatment as a factor."
Explore further: Child maltreatment increases risk of adult obesity
More information: ajp.psychiatryonline.org/article.aspx?articleID=1733358
Medical Xpress on facebook
Related Stories
Child maltreatment increases risk of adult obesity
May 21, 2013
Children who have suffered maltreatment are 36% more likely to be obese in adulthood compared to non-maltreated children, according to a new study by King's College London. The authors estimate that the prevention or effective ...
Child maltreatment linked to mental and physical health disorders in later life
Nov 28, 2012
(Medical Xpress)—Child physical abuse, emotional abuse and neglect is linked to mental health disorders, drug use, suicide attempts, sexually transmitted infections and risky sexual behaviour in adulthood, according to ...
Childhood maltreatment linked to long-term depression risk and poor response to treatment
Aug 14, 2011
People who have experienced maltreatment as children are twice as likely to develop both multiple and long-lasting depressive episodes as those without a history of childhood maltreatment, according to a new study. The research, ...
Maternal posttraumatic stress disorder associated with increased risk for child maltreatment
Sep 02, 2013
Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) in mothers appears to be associated with an increased risk for child maltreatment beyond that associated with maternal depression, according to a study published by JAMA Pediatrics.
Highlighting molecular clues to the link between childhood maltreatment and later suicide
Jul 03, 2012
Exposure to childhood maltreatment increases the risk for most psychiatric disorders as well as many negative consequences of these conditions. This new study, by Dr. Gustavo Turecki and colleagues at McGill University, Canada, ...
Recommended for you
'Brain training' may boost working memory, but not intelligence
2 hours ago
Brain training games, apps, and websites are popular and it's not hard to see why—who wouldn't want to give their mental abilities a boost? New research suggests that brain training programs might strengthen your ability ...
Babies learn to anticipate touch in the womb
11 hours ago
Babies learn how to anticipate touch while in the womb, according to new research by Durham and Lancaster universities.
Wedded bliss or blues? Scientists link DNA to marital satisfaction
14 hours ago
What makes some people more prone to wedded bliss or sorrow than others? Researchers at UC Berkeley and Northwestern University have found a major clue in our DNA. A gene involved in the regulation of serotonin ...
Researchers test biofeedback device in lowering grandmothers' stress
16 hours ago
In a pilot study by Case Western Reserve University's Frances Payne Bolton School of Nursing, 20 grandmothers were able to lower their stress levels with a biofeedback device that tracks breathing patterns.
Study casts light on addressing domestic violence among female US veterans
16 hours ago
A new study, published in Springer's Journal of Family Violence, casts light on how health care providers respond to the emotional, sexual and physical violence that female veterans sometimes experience at the hands of the ...
How do stress hormones during pregnancy predict adult nicotine addiction?
19 hours ago
Adult women whose mothers had increased levels of stress hormones while they were pregnant are at greater risk of becoming addicted to nicotine, according to a new study led by a Miriam Hospital researcher.
User comments
© Medical Xpress 2011-2013, Phys.org network
0 comments:
Post a Comment