Routine screening for adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) still doesn't make sense.

Child Abuse Negl

Departments of Community Health Sciences and Psychiatry, Max Rady College of Medicine, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Canada. Electronic address:

Published: February 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • When people notice a serious health or social problem, they often want to start screening everyone to find out who might be affected, like with Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs).
  • However, there isn’t enough proof that these screening programs actually help people more than they might hurt them.
  • The authors believe it’s better to spend money on high-quality studies to find the best ways to prevent ACEs, and to focus on helping individuals who already have health or social issues, instead of just screening for risks.

Article Abstract

When a serious health or social problem is identified as both prevalent and in need of attention, a common response is to propose that various systems implement routine identification, such as universal screening. However, these well-intentioned responses often fail to consider the key requirements necessary to determine whether benefits outweigh harms. Unfortunately, this continues to be the case for calls to implement routine screening for Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs). Persistent evidence gaps for this type of screening include the lack of any randomized controlled trials demonstrating that ACEs screening programs lead to any benefits. Rather than being informed by established screening principles, the calls to proceed with ACEs screening appear to rely on the assumption that simply identifying risk factors can lead to beneficial outcomes that outweigh any risk of harms. This may reflect a gap in understanding that patterns identified at the population level (e.g., that more ACEs are associated with more health and social problems) cannot be directly translated to practices at the level of the individual. This commentary does not question the importance of ACEs; rather it identifies that directing limited resources to screening approaches for which there is no evidence that benefits outweigh harms is problematic. Instead, we advocate for the investment in high-quality trials of prevention interventions to determine where best to direct limited resources to reduce the occurrence of ACEs, and for the prioritization of evidence-based treatment services for those with existing health and social conditions, whether or not they are attributed to ACEs.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.chiabu.2024.106708DOI Listing

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