Tuesday, March 8, 2022

Childhood adversity is a ‘cause of causes’ of adult illnesses and mental health problems




I am really just coming to fully appreciate what is actually going on.  It is incrediadably important because we have so many ways of inducing childhood trauma, long before the child has developed mental defenses.  The defenses themselves are also potential sources of what we call illness or disfunction.

A simple low level parental disfunction can easily lead to learned behavior by the child.  Not terrible, unless it is reinforced and become embedded in the automatic nervous system we ignore at our peril.

In my case a low level of teacher abuse in grade one led directly to a lifetime dose of stage fright deeply influencing many decissions.  What else happened do you wonder?

My point is that in every childhood we have different types of trauma and yes most do not lead to strained behavior and the like.  what is certain is that everyone on reaching puberty needs a memory audit to open up those possiblities and real action to counter any impact.  Just understanding the source of my stage fright would have rapidly eliminated the problem with or without third party therapy.

The solution is as simple as that and it would also open up family abuse much earlier as well.  It would also stiffen family discipline.



Childhood adversity is a ‘cause of causes’ of adult illnesses and mental health problems
Childhood trauma has a complex relationship with social determinants of health.

Adverse childhood events may contribute to cascading health risks over a lifetime.

he Conversation,
Feb 11 2022

By Robert Maunder, Jon Hunter

https://www.healthing.ca/wellness/mental-health/childhood-adversity-is-a-cause-of-causes-of-adult-illnesses-and-mental-health-problems/?

Every day we are exposed to things like pollution and ultraviolet light which increase our risk of illness. Many people take on additional risks — due to tobacco smoke, fast food or alcohol, for example.

But there is a less-recogized exposure that is even more common than smoking and increases the risk of heart disease, diabetes, cancer, chronic lung diseases, sexually transmitted infections, chronic pain, mental illness and reduces one’s life by as much as 20 years.

This public health hazard that hides in plain sight is childhood adversity: experiences like physical abuse, sexual abuse and neglect.

Childhood adversity is common


The reason that ACEs contribute to so many diseases is that they are associated with many things that trigger other causes of disease. Think of ACEs as a “cause of causes.”

Health risk behaviours and physiological changes

As kids who have had adverse experiences grow up, they are more likely to smoke, to drink excessively and to use nonprescription drugs. They are more likely to engage in risky sexual activities and to become obese. Not all kids with ACEs take on risky activities, of course, but enough to contribute to ACEs’ health consequences.

Growing up in conditions that are consistently frightening or stressful affects the biology of developing bodies, especially the development of the systems that regulate our reactions to threats, from predators to viruses. ACEs are even associated with changes in our chromosomes that are linked to early mortality.

Interpersonal and psychological effects

As psychiatrists for adults who experience physical and mental illness in combination, our patients often tell us about the personal impact of ACEs. One man said he did not “have even the slightest shadow of a doubt that a loss of human connection is the most substantial negative impact” of these experiences. The health costs of human disconnection are profound. Indeed, lacking interpersonal support may hasten mortality as much or more than smoking, excessive drinking, inactivity, obesity or untreated high blood pressure.

The psychological effects of ACEs may be more obvious and can include fearful expectations, a conviction that one is unworthy of love or protection, unregulated anger or shame and discombobulating memories of bad events.

It greatly increases the risk of depression, anxiety disorders, post-traumatic stress disorder and addictions. The one in three adults who experienced childhood sexual or physical abuse or witnessed interpersonal violence at home have at least twice the incidence of these disorders compared to others.

And then the dominoes fall: mental illness greatly increases the likelihood, burden and consequences of physical illness. To give just one example, in the months after experiencing a heart attack, those who are depressed are several times more likely to die. So, we see that ACEs don’t only lead to one kind of trouble, but to many.



Social determinants of health

Finally, the burden of illness is not distributed fairly. Maintaining health is more challenging for those who are disadvantaged by poverty, lack of education, language barriers, discrimination and living with the continuing systemic harms of colonization and multi-generational trauma.

Childhood trauma has a complex relationship with these social determinants of health. On one hand, ACEs are not unique to marginalized groups and can occur across all strata of society. On the other hand, the risk of experiencing ACEs may be greater in some groups and the consequences of ACEs may multiply as social forces interact.


Intersecting components of personal experience and identity attract stigma and discrimination, which in turn influences mental health, self-care and one’s ability to navigate a healthcare system that has multiple barriers and gaps. It is a complex web and ACEs contribute to this complexity.
A cause of causes

Events that occur in childhood may contribute to cascading health risks over one’s lifetime. There are so many paths to illness interacting with one another over decades and compromising health in so many ways, that it should be no surprise that childhood adversity is a profound public health problem.

It is time that we, as a society, recognized ACEs as the malignant force that they are. Those affected need to be treated with compassion and also with awareness of the long-lasting effects of early adversity on health. Research that helps us understand the lifelong impact of ACEs could help guide prevention of chronic illnesses and mental health issues in the many people who experience adversity during childhood.

Robert Maunder is a Professor of Psychiatry at University of Toronto.

Jon Hunter is a Professor of Psychiatry at University of Toronto.




This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

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