Associations between early childhood adversity and behavioral, substance use, and academic outcomes in childhood through adolescence in a U.S. longitudinal cohort
- PMID: 36774809
- PMCID: PMC10089259
- DOI: 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2023.109795
Associations between early childhood adversity and behavioral, substance use, and academic outcomes in childhood through adolescence in a U.S. longitudinal cohort
Abstract
Background: Childhood adversity is strongly associated with adolescent substance use, but few epidemiologic studies have investigated early childhood adversity (ECA) before age 5. This study investigated pathways by which ECA is associated with adolescent alcohol and cannabis use and high school completion through childhood behavioral and academic mediators and their reciprocal effects.
Methods: Data were from the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth 1979-Child/Young Adult Cohort which surveyed children born 1984-1999 and followed through 2016 (n = 5521). Outcomes included alcohol and cannabis use frequency at ages 15-18, and high school completion by age 19. ECA at ages 0-4 was a cumulative score of maternal heavy drinking/drug use, low emotional support, low cognitive stimulation, and household poverty. Multilevel path models were conducted with ECA, childhood mediators (behavioral (externalizing and internalizing problems) and academics (reading and math scores), accounting for demographics and confounders.
Results: ECA was indirectly associated with adolescent cannabis frequency through mediators of externalizing/internalizing problems, low academics, and early cannabis onset before age 14. ECA was also indirectly associated with alcohol frequency via the same mediators, but not early alcohol onset. Greater behavioral problems elevated substance use risk; whereas, low academics reduced risk. Reciprocal effects were evident between childhood behavioral problems and cannabis frequency to high school completion.
Conclusion: Adversity from birth to age 4 is associated with childhood behavioral problems and lower academics, which increased adolescent alcohol and cannabis use and lowered high school completion. Early childhood interventions with parents and preschools/daycare may reduce early onset and adolescent substance use.
Keywords: Academic outcomes; Adolescent alcohol use; Adolescent cannabis use; Adverse childhood events; Behavioral problems; Early childhood adversity.
Copyright © 2023 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Conflict of interest statement
Conflict of Interest
No conflict declared
Figures
References
-
- Afifi TO, Taillieu T, Salmon S, Davila IG, Stewart-Tufescu A, Fortier J, Struck S, Asmundson GJG, Sareen J, MacMillan HL, 2020. Adverse childhood experiences (ACEs), peer victimization, and substance use among adolescents. Child Abuse & Neglect 106, 104504. - PubMed
-
- APHA, 2018. Chronic Stress and the Risk of High School Dropout. American Public Health Association Center for School Health and Education. p. 8.
-
- Asparouhov T, Muthen B, 2007. Computationally efficient estimation of multilevel high-dimensional latent variable models. Proceedings of the proceedings of the 2007 JSM meeting in Salt Lake City, Utah, Section on Statistics in Epidemiology. Citeseer.
-
- Barbeau K, Boileau K, Sarr F, Smith K, 2019. Path analysis in Mplus; A tutorial using a conceptual model of psychological and behavioral antecedent of bulimic symptoms in young adults. The Quantitative Methods for Psychology 15, 38–53.
-
- Barnett WS, 1998. Long-term cognitive and academic effects of early childhood education on children in poverty. Preventive medicine 27, 204–207. - PubMed
