AI Article Synopsis

  • Adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) significantly impact child well-being and continue to affect individuals into adulthood, yet most research has focused on high-income countries rather than sub-Saharan Africa (SSA).
  • A study analyzed data from 11,498 young adults in five SSA countries to assess the prevalence of six types of ACEs and their link to mental health, substance use, and violence.
  • Findings revealed high prevalence rates of ACEs, particularly witnessing community violence, with clear connections between cumulative ACE exposure and negative outcomes, emphasizing the need for gender-specific interventions to address these issues in SSA.

Article Abstract

Background: Adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) can have debilitating effects on child well-being, with consequences persisting into adulthood. Most ACE studies have been conducted in high-income countries and show a graded relationship between multiple ACE exposures and adverse health outcomes. Less is known about the types and burden of ACEs in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA).

Objective: To estimate the pooled prevalence of six individual and cumulative ACE exposures (physical, sexual, and emotional violence; orphanhood; witnessing interparental and community violence) and assess their association with mental health outcomes, substance use, and violence perpetration among young adults in SSA.

Participants And Setting: Aggregate data from the Violence Against Children and Youth Survey (VACS) in Cote d'Ivoire 2018, Kenya 2019, Lesotho 2018, Mozambique 2019, and Namibia 2019 included a sample of 11,498 young adults aged 18-24 years.

Methods: Cumulative ACEs were defined by an integer count of the total number of individual ACEs (0 to 6). Weighted prevalence and adjusted odds ratios were estimated.

Result: ACEs prevalence ranged from 7.8% (emotional violence) to 55.0% (witnessing community violence). Strong graded relationships between cumulative ACE exposure and all study outcomes for both males and females were observed. Among females, witnessing interparental violence was the only individual ACE risk factor significantly associated with increased odds of substance use; among males, emotional violence was significantly associated with all outcomes.

Conclusion: ACEs are associated with adverse mental health, substance use, and violence perpetration in SSA. Gender-specific and culturally sensitive intervention strategies are needed to effectively mitigate ACEs in this population.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11160582PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.chiabu.2023.106524DOI Listing

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