童年的不良经历越多,社会稀薄程度和严重的心理压力就越大。

Yuna Koyama, Yui Yamaoka, Hisaaki Nishimura, Jin Kuramochi, Takeo Fujiwara
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引用次数: 0

摘要

童年的不良经历与社会网络减少或社会稀疏导致的精神病理学有关。然而,由于很少有研究对社交网络进行反复评估,因此缺乏有关童年不良经历、社交网络和精神病理学之间时间关联的证据。此外,与过度警觉和炎症有关的潜在神经认知和生物机制仍不清楚。本研究旨在利用 COVID-19 大流行期间的三波人群队列研究(n = 465)阐明这些关联,其中我们利用了重复社交网络评估。自我报告问卷评估了不良童年经历、社交网络规模和多样性、心理困扰以及对COVID-19的过度警惕。此外,还进行了血液测试以测量炎症标志物。与没有不良童年经历的人相比,有更多不良童年经历的人的社交网络增幅较小。社交网络规模的缩小与严重的心理困扰有关,但在调整了基线困扰后,这种关联并未保持。另一方面,网络多样性的减少与心理困扰的增加有关。我们没有发现任何通过 COVID-19 和炎症的过度警觉来解释不良童年经历、社交稀疏和心理困扰之间关系的途径。这些发现强调了社会网络的重大变化与童年不良经历和心理病理学之间的关联。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

More adverse childhood experiences are associated with increased social thinning and severe psychological distress

More adverse childhood experiences are associated with increased social thinning and severe psychological distress
Adverse childhood experiences have been linked to psychopathology due to reduced social networks or social thinning. However, evidence of the temporal associations between adverse childhood experiences, social networks, and psychopathology was lacking, as few studies assessed social networks repeatedly. Further, their underlying neurocognitive and biological mechanisms related to hypervigilance and inflammation remain unclear. This study aimed to clarify these associations using a three-wave population-based cohort study during the COVID-19 pandemic (n = 465), where we leveraged repeated social network assessments. Self-reported questionnaires assessed adverse childhood experiences, social network size and diversity, psychological distress, and hypervigilance regarding COVID-19. Blood tests were conducted to measure inflammation markers. Individuals with more adverse childhood experiences demonstrated lesser increases in their social networks than those without adverse childhood experiences. Decreased network sizes were associated with severe psychological distress, but this association did not remain after adjusting for baseline distress. On the other hand, reduced network diversities were associated with increased psychological distress. We did not find any paths through hypervigilance regarding COVID-19 and inflammation that explain associations between adverse childhood experiences, social thinning, and psychological distress. These findings emphasize the significant social network changes in the associations between adverse childhood experiences and psychopathology. A 3-wave population-based cohort study between June 2020 and November 2021 showed that those with more childhood adversities grew or recovered their social networks to a lesser degree and that people with smaller network increases showed more distress.
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