Timing of exposure to household poverty and adolescent mental health problems.

IF 5.9 2区 医学 Q1 PSYCHIATRY
Y Koyama, A Isumi, T Fujiwara
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Aims: Mental health problems in adolescence are increasingly prevalent and have tremendous impacts on life-long health and mortality. Although household poverty is a known risk factor for adolescent mental health, evidence of the timing hypothesis is scarce. We aimed to examine the longitudinal associations of poverty across childhood with mental health in adolescence, focusing on the timing of exposure.

Methods: We used the data of 5,671 children from a Japanese population-based longitudinal cohort, which recruited the first graders (aged 6-7 years) and followed biannually until eighth grade (aged 13-14 years) in Adachi, Tokyo. Household poverty was defined as households having any of the following experiences: annual income less than Japanese yen 3 million, payment difficulties and material deprivations, measured in first, second, fourth, sixth and eighth grades. Adolescent mental health included parent-report internalizing and externalizing problems (the Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire), self-report depression (the Patient Health Questionnaire-9) and self-esteem (the Japanese version Children's Perceived Competence Scale) in eighth grade. We applied g-estimation of structural nested mean modelling to account for time-varying confounders.

Results: If adolescents were exposed to household poverty at any grade across childhood, on average, they would report more severe depressive symptoms (ψ = 0.32 [95% CI 0.13; 0.51]) and lower self-esteem (ψ = -0.41 [-0.62; -0.21]) in eighth grade. There were also average associations of household poverty at any grade with more internalizing (ψ = 0.19 [0.10; 0.29]) and externalizing problems (ψ = 0.10 [0.002; 0.19]). Although the associations between household poverty and mental health were stronger in younger ages (e.g., poverty in the second grade → depression: ψ = 0.54 [-0.12; 1.19] vs. poverty in the eighth grade → depression: ψ = -0.01 [-0.66; 0.64]), overlapping 95% CIs indicated no statistically significantly different associations by the timing of exposure.

Conclusion: We found the average effect of exposure to household poverty at any grade on mental health outcomes in eighth grade, failing to support the timing hypothesis. The findings indicate that the effects of household poverty accumulate over time in childhood and impact adolescent mental health (cumulative hypothesis) rather than the effects differ by the timing of exposure. While cumulative effects suggest a persistent intervention in poor households across childhood, we highlight intervention at any timing in childhood may be effective in alleviating adolescent mental health problems.

接触家庭贫困和青少年心理健康问题的时间。
目的:青少年心理健康问题日益普遍,并对终身健康和死亡率产生巨大影响。虽然家庭贫困是青少年心理健康的一个已知风险因素,但时间假说的证据很少。我们的目的是研究童年时期贫困与青春期心理健康的纵向关联,重点关注暴露的时间。方法:我们使用了来自日本人口纵向队列的5,671名儿童的数据,该队列招募了一年级(6-7岁)的儿童,每两年随访一次,直到东京安达立的八年级(13-14岁)。家庭贫困被定义为具有以下任何一种经历的家庭:年收入低于300万日元,支付困难和物质匮乏,以一、二、四、六和八年级来衡量。八年级青少年心理健康包括父母报告的内化和外化问题(优势与困难问卷)、自我报告的抑郁(患者健康问卷-9)和自尊(日文版儿童感知能力量表)。我们应用结构嵌套均值模型的g估计来解释时变混杂因素。结果:如果青少年在童年时期处于任何年级的家庭贫困中,平均而言,他们会报告更严重的抑郁症状(ψ = 0.32 [95% CI 0.13;0.51])和较低的自尊心(ψ = -0.41 [-0.62;-0.21])。此外,任何等级的家庭贫困与更多的内化(ψ = 0.19 [0.10;0.29])和外部化问题(ψ = 0.10 [0.002;0.19])。虽然家庭贫困与心理健康之间的关联在较年轻的年龄更强(例如,二年级贫困→抑郁:ψ = 0.54 [-0.12;1.19]八年级贫困→抑郁:ψ = -0.01 [-0.66;0.64]),重叠的95% ci表明暴露时间没有统计学上的显著差异。结论:我们发现任何年级家庭贫困暴露对八年级心理健康结果的平均影响,不支持时间假设。研究结果表明,家庭贫困的影响在童年时期随着时间的推移而积累,并影响青少年的心理健康(累积假设),而不是影响因暴露时间而异。虽然累积效应表明在整个儿童时期对贫困家庭进行持续干预,但我们强调,在儿童时期的任何时间进行干预都可能有效缓解青少年心理健康问题。
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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来源期刊
CiteScore
7.80
自引率
1.20%
发文量
121
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Epidemiology and Psychiatric Sciences is a prestigious international, peer-reviewed journal that has been publishing in Open Access format since 2020. Formerly known as Epidemiologia e Psichiatria Sociale and established in 1992 by Michele Tansella, the journal prioritizes highly relevant and innovative research articles and systematic reviews in the areas of public mental health and policy, mental health services and system research, as well as epidemiological and social psychiatry. Join us in advancing knowledge and understanding in these critical fields.
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