Adverse childhood experiences and crime outcomes in early adulthood: A multi-method approach in a Brazilian birth cohort

•A cumulative score may hide important differences in risk for crime outcomes.•Cumulative adverse childhood experiences were associated with crime.•ACEs – individually, cumulatively, and as clusters – were associated with crime.•Some individual and/or combinations of ACEs showed particularly strong...

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Veröffentlicht in:Psychiatry research 2024-04, Vol.334, p.115809-115809, Article 115809
Hauptverfasser: Bauer, Andreas, Martins, Rafaela Costa, Hammerton, Gemma, Hoffmann, Maurício Scopel, Cardoso, Andressa Souza, Colvara, Camila, Hartmann, Clarissa Fialho, Calegaro, Gabriel, Perrone, Luciana Rodrigues, Aurélio, Nilvia, Menezes, Ana M.B., Murray, Joseph
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•A cumulative score may hide important differences in risk for crime outcomes.•Cumulative adverse childhood experiences were associated with crime.•ACEs – individually, cumulatively, and as clusters – were associated with crime.•Some individual and/or combinations of ACEs showed particularly strong effects.•Some ACEs were more strongly linked to each other than others. This study aimed to investigate alternative approaches to a cumulative risk score in the relationship between adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) and crime. Using data from the 1993 Pelotas (Brazil) Birth Cohort (n = 3236), we measured 12 ACEs up to 15 years, and past-year violent and non-violent crime at 22 years. We used four analytical approaches: single adversities, cumulative risk, latent class analysis, and network analysis. When examined individually, physical abuse, emotional abuse, and domestic violence were associated with both crime outcomes, whereas maternal mental illness and discrimination were associated with violent crime only, and parental divorce and poverty with non-violent crime only. There was a cumulative effect of ACEs on crime. The class with child maltreatment and household challenges was associated with both crime outcomes; exposure to household challenges and social risks was associated with violent crime only. In network models, crime showed conditional associations with physical abuse, maternal mental illness, and parental divorce. Although cumulative ACEs did associate with crime, some individual and combinations of ACEs showed particularly strong and robust effects, which were not captured by the cumulative score. Many ACEs are closely connected and/or cluster together, and the usefulness of the ACE score needs to be further evaluated.
ISSN:0165-1781
1872-7123
DOI:10.1016/j.psychres.2024.115809