The relationship between parental adverse childhood experiences and the health, well-being and development outcomes of their children : a systematic review

Arnold, R. and Ahmed, F. and Clarke, A. and Quinn, N. and Beenstock, J. and Holland, P. (2023) The relationship between parental adverse childhood experiences and the health, well-being and development outcomes of their children : a systematic review. Public Health, 219. pp. 146-153. ISSN 0033-3506

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Abstract

Objectives A growing body of research is emerging regarding the relationship between parental adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) and negative health, well-being and developmental outcomes in their children. This systematic review seeks to understand the relationship between parental ACEs and the health, well-being and developmental outcomes of their children and whether the relationships differ according to the number and type of parental ACEs. Study design Systematic review. Method The review includes articles published between 2000 and 2021 from studies using quantitative longitudinal methods and multivariate analysis to investigate the relationship between parental ACEs and their offspring's outcomes. Relevant studies were identified through a systematic search of five databases and findings synthesised using a narrative synthesis. This review was registered on PROSPERO (CRD42021274068). Results Nineteen studies met the inclusion criteria and were included in the review. This resulted in a combined population sample of 124,043 parents and 128,400 children. Diversity in measurement of parental ACE exposure and in the type of ACEs measured within the studies precluded a meta-analysis. Offspring of parents exposed to ACEs had a higher risk of a range of negative health, well-being and developmental outcomes. This relationship differs according to the number and type of parental ACEs, with a positive relationship observed between the number of parental ACEs and the risk of negative health, well-being and development outcomes in their children. Conclusions These findings indicate that screening for parental ACEs by health visitors, midwives and other health or social care staff may identify an at-risk population of infants, children and adolescents and improve child outcomes.

Item Type:
Journal Article
Journal or Publication Title:
Public Health
Subjects:
?? parental adverse childhood experiencesintergenerationalchild healthchild development ??
ID Code:
194863
Deposited By:
Deposited On:
01 Jun 2023 15:55
Refereed?:
Yes
Published?:
Published
Last Modified:
16 Feb 2024 00:57