The Moderation Effect of Disability Status on the Associations Among ACEs, Mental Health, and Binge Drinking.

Megan R Westmore, Hui Huang
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Abstract

Purpose: Mental health and substance use social workers must be prepared to work with people with disabilities, as this population has higher rates of adverse childhood experiences (ACEs), and ACEs can lead to mental health and substance use problems. The study's purpose is to assess the moderating effect of disability on the interrelationships among ACEs, mental health, and binge drinking.

Materials and methods: Using data from the 2021 Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System (BRFSS) survey, we first used multigroup confirmatory factor analysis to establish the underlying factor structure of the ACEs questionnaire for respondents with and without disabilities. Next, we used multigroup structural equation modeling to assess the mediating effect of mental health difficulties on the association between ACEs and binge drinking for respondents with and without disabilities.

Results: A three-factor measurement model (emotional or physical abuse, sexual abuse, and household dysfunction) demonstrated excellent model fits. Mental health difficulties significantly mediated the association between ACEs and binge drinking for all respondents. Disability status was a statistically significant moderator of a few associations, with more mental health variance explained by ACEs for the disabled respondents. Direct paths showed household dysfunction and sexual abuse had greater impacts on mental health for disabled respondents, and indirect paths showed these factors also had greater impacts on binge drinking among disabled respondents.

Discussion and conclusion: To prevent mental health and binge drinking problems among disabled individuals, we need evidence-based interventions to identify their ACEs and provide accessible, trauma-informed treatments to them.

残疾状况对 ACE、心理健康和酗酒之间关系的调节作用。
目的:心理健康和药物使用社会工作者必须做好与残障人士合作的准备,因为残障人士的童年不良经历(ACEs)发生率较高,而 ACEs 可导致心理健康和药物使用问题。本研究旨在评估残疾对 ACE、心理健康和酗酒之间相互关系的调节作用:利用 2021 年行为危险因素监测系统(BRFSS)调查的数据,我们首先使用多组确证因子分析来确定有残疾和无残疾受访者 ACEs 问卷的基本因子结构。接着,我们使用多组结构方程模型来评估心理健康困难对有残疾和无残疾受访者的 ACE 与酗酒之间关系的中介作用:三因素测量模型(情感或身体虐待、性虐待和家庭功能障碍)显示了极佳的模型拟合效果。对所有受访者而言,心理健康困难在很大程度上调节了 ACE 与酗酒之间的关系。残疾状况在统计学上对一些关联具有显著的调节作用,对于残疾受访者来说,ACE 可以解释更多的心理健康差异。直接路径显示,家庭功能障碍和性虐待对残疾受访者的心理健康影响更大,间接路径显示,这些因素对残疾受访者的酗酒影响也更大:为了预防残疾人的心理健康和酗酒问题,我们需要基于证据的干预措施来识别他们的 ACE,并为他们提供可获得的、创伤知情的治疗。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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