Childhood Maternal Warmth, Social Safety Schemas, and Adolescent Mental and Physical Health.

IF 17.1 1区 医学 Q1 PSYCHIATRY
Jenna Alley, Dimitris I Tsomokos, Summer Mengelkoch, George M Slavich
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Importance: Although early maternal warmth strongly predicts adolescent health, questions remain about the biopsychosocial mechanisms underlying this association.

Objective: To understand how maternal warmth at 3 years of age shapes adolescent social safety schemas at 14 years of age and physical and mental health at 17 years of age.

Design, setting, and participants: The Millennium Cohort Study tracks approximately 19 200 children born from late 2000 to early 2002 in the UK. Participants were assessed from ages 3 to 17 years.

Exposure: Low maternal warmth (eg, lack of praise, negative tone of voice when speaking to the child) and maternal harshness (eg, using physical restraint, grabbing the child) were independently coded during a home visit (age 3 years).

Main outcomes and measures: Social safety (age 14 years) was measured by children's responses to 3 items (eg, "I have family and friends who help me feel safe, secure and happy"). Physical health was self-reported on a scale ranging from 1 (excellent) to 5 (poor) (age 17 years). Psychological distress (age 17 years) was assessed using the 6-item Kessler Psychological Distress Scale. Psychiatric problems (age 17 years) was a latent variable composed of self-disclosed clinical diagnosis of depression/anxiety, self-harm, and suicidal behaviors.

Results: The present sample included 8540 youths (52% female; 3.0% Black or Black British, 2.8% Indian, 6.7% Pakistani and Bangladeshi, 2.8% Mixed, 83% White, and 1.6% other). Data were analyzed from March 2024 to September 2024 using structural equation modeling. In models controlling for sex, ethnicity, income, neighborhood disadvantage, maternal mental health, and early cognitive ability, the paths from childhood maternal warmth (but not harshness) to social safety schemas at 14 years of age (b = 0.03; P < .001) and physical health at 17 years of age (b = 0.05; P = .02) were significant, suggesting that early maternal warmth enhances subsequent perceived social safety and physical health. Additionally, the paths from negative social safety schemas at 14 years of age to poorer physical health (b = 0.50; P < .001), psychological distress (b = 5.37; P < .001), and psychiatric problems (b = 0.21; P < .001) at 17 years of age were significant, suggesting that greater perceived social safety prospectively predicts better health. Social safety at 14 years of age mediated 20% to 100% of the effect of early maternal warmth on physical health, psychological distress, and psychiatric problems at 17 years of age (b = 0.01-0.15; P < .001 for all).

Conclusions and relevance: These results show that early-life maternal warmth affected adolescent health by influencing perceptions of social safety. Improving parent-child relationships and enhancing youths' perceptions of social safety may thus improve adolescent health.

儿童母亲温暖、社会安全图式与青少年身心健康。
重要性:虽然早期母亲温暖强烈地预测青少年健康,但这种关联背后的生物心理社会机制仍然存在问题。目的:了解3岁时母亲温暖对14岁青少年社会安全图式和17岁青少年身心健康的影响。设计、环境和参与者:千禧年队列研究追踪了2000年底至2002年初在英国出生的大约19 200名儿童。参与者的年龄从3岁到17岁不等。暴露:在家访期间(3岁),母亲的温暖度低(例如,缺乏表扬,对孩子说话时语气消极)和母亲的严厉(例如,使用身体约束,抓住孩子)被独立编码。主要结果和测量:社会安全(14岁)通过儿童对3个项目的反应来衡量(例如,“我有家人和朋友帮助我感到安全,有保障和快乐”)。身体健康的自我报告范围从1(优秀)到5(差)(17岁)。心理困扰(17岁)采用6项Kessler心理困扰量表进行评估。精神问题(17岁)是由自我披露的抑郁/焦虑、自残和自杀行为的临床诊断组成的潜在变量。结果:目前的样本包括8540名青年(52%女性;3.0%黑人或黑人英国人,2.8%印度人,6.7%巴基斯坦和孟加拉国人,2.8%混血儿,83%白人,1.6%其他)。使用结构方程模型对2024年3月至2024年9月的数据进行分析。在控制性别、种族、收入、邻里劣势、母亲心理健康和早期认知能力的模型中,从儿童时期母亲温暖(但不严厉)到14岁时社会安全图式的路径(b = 0.03;P结论与相关性:这些结果表明,早期母亲温暖通过影响社会安全感影响青少年健康。因此,改善亲子关系和增强青少年对社会安全的认识可以改善青少年的健康。
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
JAMA Psychiatry
JAMA Psychiatry PSYCHIATRY-
CiteScore
30.60
自引率
1.90%
发文量
233
期刊介绍: JAMA Psychiatry is a global, peer-reviewed journal catering to clinicians, scholars, and research scientists in psychiatry, mental health, behavioral science, and related fields. The Archives of Neurology & Psychiatry originated in 1919, splitting into two journals in 1959: Archives of Neurology and Archives of General Psychiatry. In 2013, these evolved into JAMA Neurology and JAMA Psychiatry, respectively. JAMA Psychiatry is affiliated with the JAMA Network, a group of peer-reviewed medical and specialty publications.
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