The moderating and mediating role of resilience in the relationship between adverse childhood experiences and depression, PTSD, and suicidality in Kenyan youth.
Victoria Mutiso, David Ndetei, Eric Jeremiah, Pascalyne Nyamai, Samuel Walusaka, Veronica Onyango, Christine Musyimi, Kamaldeep Bhui, Daniel Mamah
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) are widely associated with mental health disorders, such as depression, post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), and suicidality. Resilience plays a role in mediation and moderation of these associations, yet there is limited data from Kenya on this. This cross-sectional study examined the role of resilience in the relationship between ACEs and mental health outcomes among 1,972 participants aged 14-25 years in the Nairobi Metropolitan area. Participants completed the Trauma and Distress Scale (ACEs), Patient Health Questionnaire-9 (depression), Columbia-Suicide Severity Rating Scale (suicidality), Harvard Trauma Questionnaire (PTSD), and Adult Resilience Measure-Revised (resilience). Analyses of moderation and mediation using Hayes Process Macro indicated that resilience moderated the association between ACEs with PTSD and depression, with minimal effect on suicidality. It also moderated specific associations, including emotional/physical neglect on ideation, physical abuse on lifetime behavior (p = 0.0479), and total ACEs on recent behavior (p = 0.0514). Resilience also partially mediated the effects of ACEs on PTSD and depression, and fully mediated suicidality for specific ACE domains (emotional neglect, physical neglect, and physical abuse on suicidal ideation and all ACEs on recent suicidal behaviors). Building resilience mitigates the effects of ACEs on depression, PTSD, and suicidality among Kenyan youth.
期刊介绍:
lobal Mental Health (GMH) is an Open Access journal that publishes papers that have a broad application of ‘the global point of view’ of mental health issues. The field of ‘global mental health’ is still emerging, reflecting a movement of advocacy and associated research driven by an agenda to remedy longstanding treatment gaps and disparities in care, access, and capacity. But these efforts and goals are also driving a potential reframing of knowledge in powerful ways, and positioning a new disciplinary approach to mental health. GMH seeks to cultivate and grow this emerging distinct discipline of ‘global mental health’, and the new knowledge and paradigms that should come from it.