TY - JOUR
T1 - Immediate impact of child maltreatment on mental, developmental, and physical health trajectories
AU - Winter, Sibylle M.
AU - Dittrich, Katja
AU - Dörr, Peggy
AU - Overfeld, Judith
AU - Moebus, Imke
AU - Murray, Elena
AU - Karaboycheva, Gergana
AU - Zimmermann, Christian
AU - Knop, Andrea
AU - Voelkle, Manuel
AU - Entringer, Sonja
AU - Buss, Claudia
AU - Haynes, John Dylan
AU - Binder, Elisabeth B.
AU - Heim, Christine
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 The Authors. Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of Association for Child and Adolescent Mental Health.
PY - 2022/9
Y1 - 2022/9
N2 - Objective: The immediate impact of child maltreatment on health and developmental trajectories over time is unknown. Longitudinal studies starting in the direct aftermath of exposure with repeated follow-up are needed. Method: We assessed health and developmental outcomes in 6-month intervals over 2 years in 173 children, aged 3–5 years at study entry, including 86 children with exposure to emotional and physical abuse or neglect within 6 months and 87 nonmaltreated children. Assessments included clinician-administered, self- and parent-report measures of psychiatric and behavioral symptoms, development, and physical health. Linear mixed models and latent growth curve analyses were used to contrast trajectories between groups and to investigate the impact of maltreatment features on trajectories. Results: Maltreated children exhibited greater numbers of psychiatric diagnoses (b = 1.998, p <.001), externalizing (b = 13.29, p <.001) and internalizing (b = 11.70, p <.001) symptoms, impairments in cognitive (b = −11.586, p <.001), verbal (b = −10.687, p <.001), and motor development (b = −7.904, p =.006), and greater numbers of medical symptoms (b = 1.021, p <.001) compared to nonmaltreated children across all time-points. Lifetime maltreatment severity and/or age at earliest maltreatment exposure predicted adverse outcomes over time. Conclusion: The profound, immediate, and stable impact of maltreatment on health and developmental trajectories supports a biological embedding model and provides foundation to scrutinize the precise underlying mechanisms. Such knowledge will enable the development of early risk markers and mechanism-driven interventions that mitigate adverse trajectories in maltreated children.
AB - Objective: The immediate impact of child maltreatment on health and developmental trajectories over time is unknown. Longitudinal studies starting in the direct aftermath of exposure with repeated follow-up are needed. Method: We assessed health and developmental outcomes in 6-month intervals over 2 years in 173 children, aged 3–5 years at study entry, including 86 children with exposure to emotional and physical abuse or neglect within 6 months and 87 nonmaltreated children. Assessments included clinician-administered, self- and parent-report measures of psychiatric and behavioral symptoms, development, and physical health. Linear mixed models and latent growth curve analyses were used to contrast trajectories between groups and to investigate the impact of maltreatment features on trajectories. Results: Maltreated children exhibited greater numbers of psychiatric diagnoses (b = 1.998, p <.001), externalizing (b = 13.29, p <.001) and internalizing (b = 11.70, p <.001) symptoms, impairments in cognitive (b = −11.586, p <.001), verbal (b = −10.687, p <.001), and motor development (b = −7.904, p =.006), and greater numbers of medical symptoms (b = 1.021, p <.001) compared to nonmaltreated children across all time-points. Lifetime maltreatment severity and/or age at earliest maltreatment exposure predicted adverse outcomes over time. Conclusion: The profound, immediate, and stable impact of maltreatment on health and developmental trajectories supports a biological embedding model and provides foundation to scrutinize the precise underlying mechanisms. Such knowledge will enable the development of early risk markers and mechanism-driven interventions that mitigate adverse trajectories in maltreated children.
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U2 - 10.1111/jcpp.13550
DO - 10.1111/jcpp.13550
M3 - Article
C2 - 35266137
AN - SCOPUS:85126005066
SN - 0021-9630
VL - 63
SP - 1027
EP - 1045
JO - Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry and Allied Disciplines
JF - Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry and Allied Disciplines
IS - 9
ER -