1. Approaches for measuring cumulative childhood adversity: A study of youth from 5 sub-Saharan African countries.
- Author
-
Gilbert, Leah K., Matthews, Sarah, Dube, Shanta R., and Annor, Francis B.
- Subjects
- *
DOMESTIC violence , *ADVERSE childhood experiences , *VIOLENCE in the community , *DATING violence , *PSYCHOLOGICAL distress , *MIDDLE-income countries - Abstract
Adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) include forms of abuse, neglect, and household stressors that are potentially early life traumatic experiences. A summed integer count of ACEs is often used to examine cumulative childhood adversity (CCA) but has limitations. The current study tests two additional methods for measuring CCA using large samples of youth in low- and middle-income countries. Pooled data were analyzed from a multi-country, nationally representative sample of youth aged 18–24 years (N = 11,498) who completed the Violence Against Children and Youth Surveys (VACS) in Lesotho, Cote d'Ivoire, Kenya, Namibia, and Mozambique. ACE exposures included: physical, sexual, and emotional violence; witnessing interparental violence; witnessing community violence; orphanhood. CCA was operationalized using an ACE score, ACE impact (standardized regression coefficients from outcome severity), and ACE exposure context (household; intimate partner; peer; community). Associations between CCA with mental distress (MD) were examined by sex using p ≤ 0.05 as the significance level. Exposure to ≥3 ACEs was associated with MD (p < 0.05) for both sexes. Among females, all contexts contributed to MD except peer ACEs (p < 0.05). Among males, household and community ACEs contributed to MD. High-impact ACEs were associated with MD both sexes. ACE context was the best-fitting model for these data. The challenges operationalizing CCA warrant continued research to ensure adversity type, severity, and context lead to validly assessing ACEs impact on child wellbeing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF