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Assessment of Adverse Childhood Experiences in the South Bronx on the Risk of Developing Chronic Disease as Adults

Background Adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) have a negative impact on health outcomes. Using a cross-sectional study design, our objective was to identify the prevalence of ACEs among residents of South Bronx and the increased relationship between such childhood stressors and the prevalence of b...

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Autores principales: Njoroge, Alexander, Shariff, Masood A, Khan, Hira W, Gordillo, Victor, Eclarinal, Brian, Vargas, Jose, Faiz, Mohammad, Kasubhai, Moiz, Jackson, Tranice
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cureus 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10482123/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37680403
http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.43078
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author Njoroge, Alexander
Shariff, Masood A
Khan, Hira W
Gordillo, Victor
Eclarinal, Brian
Vargas, Jose
Faiz, Mohammad
Kasubhai, Moiz
Jackson, Tranice
author_facet Njoroge, Alexander
Shariff, Masood A
Khan, Hira W
Gordillo, Victor
Eclarinal, Brian
Vargas, Jose
Faiz, Mohammad
Kasubhai, Moiz
Jackson, Tranice
author_sort Njoroge, Alexander
collection PubMed
description Background Adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) have a negative impact on health outcomes. Using a cross-sectional study design, our objective was to identify the prevalence of ACEs among residents of South Bronx and the increased relationship between such childhood stressors and the prevalence of both chronic disease and modifiable high-risk behavior in adulthood. Methods We recruited patients from a hospital-based, adult primary care clinic in the metropolitan area of the South Bronx. A prospectively designed, observational study recruited patients in a consecutive fashion to conduct a cross-sectional survey between September 2017 and January 2018. The demographic representation comprises a low socioeconomic sector of urban New York City, with low education and immigrant population. A modified ACE questionnaire that included nine ACE categories (Physical Abuse, Sexual Abuse, Household Substance Abuse, Separation from Parents, Incarcerated Household Member, Parental Separation/Divorce, and Bullying) in addition to questions on demographics, high-risk behavior, and diagnosis of chronic disease. Our primary objective was to gather the incidence of ACEs organized by domains. Secondary objectives were to demonstrate any expected increase (as odds ratios (ORs)) in chronic disease or maladaptive social habits when compared to patients with no ACEs within the cohort. The OR for the associations was calculated with logistic regression. Individual logistic regression models for each chronic disease, high-risk behavior, and demographics were used to measure the exposure response of the nine ACE categories.  Results A total of 454 patients completed the survey. The average age was 53.1±14.2 years, and females were 49% of the sample. Hispanics were at 61% followed by Blacks at 34%. Participants reported high-risk behavior at 24%, had a high prevalence of chronic illness (82%), and had ACE events at 70%. We found a significant relationship between ACE events and having a chronic disease diagnosis and engagement in high-risk behavior with higher odds of reporting chronic illnesses among participants with exposure to childhood stressors (OR 1.26, 95% confidence interval 1.1-1.5, p=0.002). Of the nine ACE categories, many were independently associated with one or more chronic diseases in adulthood. Conclusion According to our survey data, ACE events in our patient population were more prevalent (30% with four or more exposures), higher than the proposed average of one out of six Americans with four or more exposures nationally according to national statistics. These childhood stressors appeared to have a strong association with the development of high-risk behavior and chronic illnesses.
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spelling pubmed-104821232023-09-07 Assessment of Adverse Childhood Experiences in the South Bronx on the Risk of Developing Chronic Disease as Adults Njoroge, Alexander Shariff, Masood A Khan, Hira W Gordillo, Victor Eclarinal, Brian Vargas, Jose Faiz, Mohammad Kasubhai, Moiz Jackson, Tranice Cureus Internal Medicine Background Adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) have a negative impact on health outcomes. Using a cross-sectional study design, our objective was to identify the prevalence of ACEs among residents of South Bronx and the increased relationship between such childhood stressors and the prevalence of both chronic disease and modifiable high-risk behavior in adulthood. Methods We recruited patients from a hospital-based, adult primary care clinic in the metropolitan area of the South Bronx. A prospectively designed, observational study recruited patients in a consecutive fashion to conduct a cross-sectional survey between September 2017 and January 2018. The demographic representation comprises a low socioeconomic sector of urban New York City, with low education and immigrant population. A modified ACE questionnaire that included nine ACE categories (Physical Abuse, Sexual Abuse, Household Substance Abuse, Separation from Parents, Incarcerated Household Member, Parental Separation/Divorce, and Bullying) in addition to questions on demographics, high-risk behavior, and diagnosis of chronic disease. Our primary objective was to gather the incidence of ACEs organized by domains. Secondary objectives were to demonstrate any expected increase (as odds ratios (ORs)) in chronic disease or maladaptive social habits when compared to patients with no ACEs within the cohort. The OR for the associations was calculated with logistic regression. Individual logistic regression models for each chronic disease, high-risk behavior, and demographics were used to measure the exposure response of the nine ACE categories.  Results A total of 454 patients completed the survey. The average age was 53.1±14.2 years, and females were 49% of the sample. Hispanics were at 61% followed by Blacks at 34%. Participants reported high-risk behavior at 24%, had a high prevalence of chronic illness (82%), and had ACE events at 70%. We found a significant relationship between ACE events and having a chronic disease diagnosis and engagement in high-risk behavior with higher odds of reporting chronic illnesses among participants with exposure to childhood stressors (OR 1.26, 95% confidence interval 1.1-1.5, p=0.002). Of the nine ACE categories, many were independently associated with one or more chronic diseases in adulthood. Conclusion According to our survey data, ACE events in our patient population were more prevalent (30% with four or more exposures), higher than the proposed average of one out of six Americans with four or more exposures nationally according to national statistics. These childhood stressors appeared to have a strong association with the development of high-risk behavior and chronic illnesses. Cureus 2023-08-07 /pmc/articles/PMC10482123/ /pubmed/37680403 http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.43078 Text en Copyright © 2023, Njoroge et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Internal Medicine
Njoroge, Alexander
Shariff, Masood A
Khan, Hira W
Gordillo, Victor
Eclarinal, Brian
Vargas, Jose
Faiz, Mohammad
Kasubhai, Moiz
Jackson, Tranice
Assessment of Adverse Childhood Experiences in the South Bronx on the Risk of Developing Chronic Disease as Adults
title Assessment of Adverse Childhood Experiences in the South Bronx on the Risk of Developing Chronic Disease as Adults
title_full Assessment of Adverse Childhood Experiences in the South Bronx on the Risk of Developing Chronic Disease as Adults
title_fullStr Assessment of Adverse Childhood Experiences in the South Bronx on the Risk of Developing Chronic Disease as Adults
title_full_unstemmed Assessment of Adverse Childhood Experiences in the South Bronx on the Risk of Developing Chronic Disease as Adults
title_short Assessment of Adverse Childhood Experiences in the South Bronx on the Risk of Developing Chronic Disease as Adults
title_sort assessment of adverse childhood experiences in the south bronx on the risk of developing chronic disease as adults
topic Internal Medicine
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10482123/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37680403
http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.43078
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