Do adversities experienced over the early life course predict mental illness and substance use behaviour in adulthood: A birth cohort study

ElsevierVolume 155, November 2022, Pages 542-549Journal of Psychiatric ResearchHighlights•

It is not known whether early life adversities may have lifelong consequences for mental health.

The sociodemographic characteristics of respondents predict the experience of life events over the early life course.

We present a prospective cohort study of early life adversities and adult mental health.

After adjustment, recent life events in childhood and adolescence predict lifetime ever depression.

Substance use behaviours to 30 years are predicted by childhood and adolescent life events.

Abstract

A range of adult health outcomes have been linked to early childhood adversities. These early adversities include parental marital breakdown and family economic disadvantage. Childhood experiences of maltreatment have also been linked to a variety of adult health outcomes. As both childhood adversities and child maltreatment often co-occur, we examine whether childhood adversities at 3 stages of the child's early life course predict any of nine adult mental health outcomes controlling for past experiences of child trauma (maltreatment).

Data are from a long running birth cohort study, the Mater-University of Queensland Study of Pregnancy (MUSP). We use bivariate and multinomial logistic regression with adjustment for confounding, to predict adult outcomes.

Experiences of recent life events in pregnancy appear to be unrelated to adult mental health. Recent life events experienced at the 5-year follow-up independently predicts lifetime ever depression and cannabis use disorder. Experiences of recent life events at 14-years of age predict lifetime ever depression, cannabis and amphetamine use in adulthood.

Our findings support early childhood interventions which should be supplemented with a focus on later childhood and the adolescent period of development. Interventions should also focus on the broader social and demographic context within which children are born. Efforts to reduce the occurrence and consequences of childhood maltreatment should be given primary attention in order to reduce the childhood factors contributing to adult mental illness.

Keywords

Cohort study

Life course

Life adversities

Child abuse and neglect

Mental health

Substance use

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