Adverse childhood experiences and long-term health in women: Accumulation of multi-morbidity
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The impact of early-life traumatic experiences on late-life morbidity remains partly unknown. We tested the hypothesis that adverse childhood experiences (ACE) and specifically abuse (physical, verbal or emotional, or sexual) experienced during childhood or early adulthood are associated with a higher rate of accumulation of multi-morbidity in women. Here we show strong evidence in support of the hypothesis. We studied 1,026 women aged 21–45 years randomly selected from the general population in Olmsted County, Minnesota and used the Rochester Epidemiology Project medical records-linkage system to measure the rate of development of 18 chronic conditions. The women had a median age of 41 years at inclusion in the study and were followed historically for a median of 21 years. Women with an ACE score ≥ 2 had higher incidence of 10 of the 18 chronic conditions considered separately and an accelerated accumulation of multi-morbidity measured as a score compared to women with ACE score 0. In addition, women exposed specifically to abuse in childhood or early adulthood had accelerated accumulation of multi-morbidity. We excluded the possible confounding effect of socioeconomic status and explored a series of possible mediation events or characteristics. We discuss several possible biological and social or behavioral mechanisms underlying these associations.