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Association of Borderline Intellectual Functioning and Adverse Childhood Experience with adult psychiatric morbidity: Findings from a British birth cohort

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Association of Borderline Intellectual Functioning and Adverse Childhood Experience with adult psychiatric morbidity: Findings from a British birth cohort. / Hassiotis, A; Brown, E; Harris, J et al.
In: BMC Psychiatry, Vol. 19, 387, 05.12.2019.

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Harvard

Hassiotis, A, Brown, E, Harris, J, Helm, D, Munir, K, Salvador-Carulla, L, Bertelli, M, Baghdadli, A, Wieland, J, Novell-Alsina, R, Cid, J, Vergés, L, Martínez-Leal, R, Mutluer, T, Ismayilov, F & Emerson, E 2019, 'Association of Borderline Intellectual Functioning and Adverse Childhood Experience with adult psychiatric morbidity: Findings from a British birth cohort', BMC Psychiatry, vol. 19, 387. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12888-019-2376-0

APA

Hassiotis, A., Brown, E., Harris, J., Helm, D., Munir, K., Salvador-Carulla, L., Bertelli, M., Baghdadli, A., Wieland, J., Novell-Alsina, R., Cid, J., Vergés, L., Martínez-Leal, R., Mutluer, T., Ismayilov, F., & Emerson, E. (2019). Association of Borderline Intellectual Functioning and Adverse Childhood Experience with adult psychiatric morbidity: Findings from a British birth cohort. BMC Psychiatry, 19, Article 387. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12888-019-2376-0

Vancouver

Hassiotis A, Brown E, Harris J, Helm D, Munir K, Salvador-Carulla L et al. Association of Borderline Intellectual Functioning and Adverse Childhood Experience with adult psychiatric morbidity: Findings from a British birth cohort. BMC Psychiatry. 2019 Dec 5;19:387. doi: 10.1186/s12888-019-2376-0

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Bibtex

@article{287e6a8c7632436384160f6216885e0e,
title = "Association of Borderline Intellectual Functioning and Adverse Childhood Experience with adult psychiatric morbidity: Findings from a British birth cohort",
abstract = "Background To examine whether Borderline Intellectual Functioning (BIF) and Adverse Childhood Experiences independently predict adult psychiatric morbidity. Methods We performed a secondary analysis of longitudinal data derived from the 1970 British Birth Cohort Study to examine whether BIF and Adverse Childhood Experiences independently predict adult mental distress as measured by the Malaise Inventory. Factor analysis was used to derive a proxy measure of IQ from cognitive testing at age 10 or 5. Variables that could be indicators of exposure to Adverse Childhood Experiences were identified and grouped into health related and socio-economic related adversity. Results Children with BIF were significantly more likely than their peers to have been exposed to Adverse Childhood Experiences (BIF mean 5.90, non-BIF mean 3.19; Mann-Whitney z = 31.74, p < 0.001). As adults, participants with BIF were significantly more likely to score above the cut-off on the Malaise Inventory. We found statistically significant relationships between the number of socio-economic Adverse Childhood Experiences and poorer adult psychiatric morbidity (r range 0.104–0.141, all p < 001). At all ages the indirect mediating effects of Adverse Childhood Experiences were significantly related to adult psychiatric morbidity. Conclusions The relationship between BIF and adult psychiatric morbidity appears to be partially mediated by exposure to Adverse Childhood Experiences. Where possible, targeting Adverse Childhood Experiences through early detection, prevention and interventions may improve psychiatric morbidity in this population group.",
keywords = "Borderline, Intellectual, Adversity, Mental wellbeing, Childhood",
author = "A Hassiotis and E Brown and J Harris and D Helm and K Munir and L Salvador-Carulla and M Bertelli and A Baghdadli and J Wieland and R Novell-Alsina and J Cid and L Verg{\'e}s and R Mart{\'i}nez-Leal and T Mutluer and F Ismayilov and Eric Emerson",
year = "2019",
month = dec,
day = "5",
doi = "10.1186/s12888-019-2376-0",
language = "English",
volume = "19",
journal = "BMC Psychiatry",
issn = "1471-244X",
publisher = "NLM (Medline)",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Association of Borderline Intellectual Functioning and Adverse Childhood Experience with adult psychiatric morbidity

T2 - Findings from a British birth cohort

AU - Hassiotis, A

AU - Brown, E

AU - Harris, J

AU - Helm, D

AU - Munir, K

AU - Salvador-Carulla, L

AU - Bertelli, M

AU - Baghdadli, A

AU - Wieland, J

AU - Novell-Alsina, R

AU - Cid, J

AU - Vergés, L

AU - Martínez-Leal, R

AU - Mutluer, T

AU - Ismayilov, F

AU - Emerson, Eric

PY - 2019/12/5

Y1 - 2019/12/5

N2 - Background To examine whether Borderline Intellectual Functioning (BIF) and Adverse Childhood Experiences independently predict adult psychiatric morbidity. Methods We performed a secondary analysis of longitudinal data derived from the 1970 British Birth Cohort Study to examine whether BIF and Adverse Childhood Experiences independently predict adult mental distress as measured by the Malaise Inventory. Factor analysis was used to derive a proxy measure of IQ from cognitive testing at age 10 or 5. Variables that could be indicators of exposure to Adverse Childhood Experiences were identified and grouped into health related and socio-economic related adversity. Results Children with BIF were significantly more likely than their peers to have been exposed to Adverse Childhood Experiences (BIF mean 5.90, non-BIF mean 3.19; Mann-Whitney z = 31.74, p < 0.001). As adults, participants with BIF were significantly more likely to score above the cut-off on the Malaise Inventory. We found statistically significant relationships between the number of socio-economic Adverse Childhood Experiences and poorer adult psychiatric morbidity (r range 0.104–0.141, all p < 001). At all ages the indirect mediating effects of Adverse Childhood Experiences were significantly related to adult psychiatric morbidity. Conclusions The relationship between BIF and adult psychiatric morbidity appears to be partially mediated by exposure to Adverse Childhood Experiences. Where possible, targeting Adverse Childhood Experiences through early detection, prevention and interventions may improve psychiatric morbidity in this population group.

AB - Background To examine whether Borderline Intellectual Functioning (BIF) and Adverse Childhood Experiences independently predict adult psychiatric morbidity. Methods We performed a secondary analysis of longitudinal data derived from the 1970 British Birth Cohort Study to examine whether BIF and Adverse Childhood Experiences independently predict adult mental distress as measured by the Malaise Inventory. Factor analysis was used to derive a proxy measure of IQ from cognitive testing at age 10 or 5. Variables that could be indicators of exposure to Adverse Childhood Experiences were identified and grouped into health related and socio-economic related adversity. Results Children with BIF were significantly more likely than their peers to have been exposed to Adverse Childhood Experiences (BIF mean 5.90, non-BIF mean 3.19; Mann-Whitney z = 31.74, p < 0.001). As adults, participants with BIF were significantly more likely to score above the cut-off on the Malaise Inventory. We found statistically significant relationships between the number of socio-economic Adverse Childhood Experiences and poorer adult psychiatric morbidity (r range 0.104–0.141, all p < 001). At all ages the indirect mediating effects of Adverse Childhood Experiences were significantly related to adult psychiatric morbidity. Conclusions The relationship between BIF and adult psychiatric morbidity appears to be partially mediated by exposure to Adverse Childhood Experiences. Where possible, targeting Adverse Childhood Experiences through early detection, prevention and interventions may improve psychiatric morbidity in this population group.

KW - Borderline

KW - Intellectual

KW - Adversity

KW - Mental wellbeing

KW - Childhood

U2 - 10.1186/s12888-019-2376-0

DO - 10.1186/s12888-019-2376-0

M3 - Journal article

VL - 19

JO - BMC Psychiatry

JF - BMC Psychiatry

SN - 1471-244X

M1 - 387

ER -