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The association between substantiated childhood maltreatment, asthma and lung function: A prospective investigation
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

The association between substantiated childhood maltreatment, asthma and lung function: A prospective investigation

Amanuel Alemu Abajobir, Steve Kisely, Gail Williams, Lane Strathearn, Sadasivam Suresh and Jake Moses Najman
Journal of psychosomatic research, Vol.101, pp.58-65
10/2017
DOI: 10.1016/j.jpsychores.2017.08.003
PMID: 28867425
url
http://hdl.handle.net/10072/387862View
Open Access

Abstract

Asthma reflects multiple and likely complex causal pathways. We investigate the possibility that childhood maltreatment is one such causal pathway. Childhood maltreatment can be interpreted as a form of early life adversity and like other life adversities may predict a range of negative health outcomes, including asthma. A total of 3762 young adults (52.63% female) from the Mater Hospital-University of Queensland Study of Pregnancy (MUSP) participated in this study. MUSP is a prospective Australian birth cohort study of mothers consecutively recruited during their first antenatal clinic visit at Brisbane's Mater Hospital from 1981 to 1983. The study followed both mother-child dyads to the age of 21years after birth. Participants reported whether they had been diagnosed by a physician with asthma by the 21-year follow-up. Trained research assistants also performed gender- and height-standardized lung function tests using a Spirobank G spirometer system attached to a laptop computer. We linked this dataset with data obtained from the child protection services and which comprised all substantiated cases of childhood maltreatment in the MUSP cohort. Substantiations of childhood maltreatment included children in an age range of 0–14years. The experience of any childhood maltreatment, particularly emotional abuse, was independently associated with self-reported physician-diagnosed asthma by the 21-year follow-up. The association was no longer significant after adjustment for a range of confounders and covariates in neglected children. Childhood maltreatment, including multiple events, was not associated with lung function in adjusted models. Childhood maltreatment, including emotional abuse, was associated with lifetime ever asthma. This was in contrast to the absence of an association with objective measures of lung function. More research is indicated on the effect of childhood maltreatment on lung function using objective measures. In the meantime, there should be a greater awareness of the potential impact of childhood maltreatment on the potential to develop asthma, as well as of the possibility that asthma in adulthood may precede childhood maltreatment. •Emotional abuse was independently associated with physician asthma report.•Confounders and covariates play significant roles in asthma diagnosis, particularly in neglected children.•Childhood maltreatment was not associated with objective measures of lung function.•More research is indicated on the effect of childhood maltreatment on lung function using objective measures.
Substantiated childhood maltreatment Lung function Adulthood Longitudinal study Asthma

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