Abstract

BackgroundEarly childhood frequent exposure to toxic stress such as abuse or neglect, parental substance abuse or parental mental illness, and violence can have a cumulative impact on the child’s mental health. Therefore, the study aimed to assess the association between frequent exposures to family-related adverse experiences and the development of behavioral and cognitive impairment in a random sample of Egyptian primary school children.ResultsWitnessing household member treated violently was the most prevalent adversity in 90.4% of the studied students, followed by emotional neglect in 88.6%. The highly exposed children were more likely to have below-average performance IQ, 2.5 times more than the exposed group (P = 0.03) [IQ score is considered average if it ranged 90–110 and below average if it ranged 70–89]. They were nearly 3 times at risk to develop behavioral problems (P = 0.003), 2.5 times more likely to develop attention deficit (P = 0.02), and nearly 5 times more likely to develop externalizing behavior (P < 0.001) than their peers.ConclusionEarly exposure to adverse experiences increases the child’s vulnerability to attention deficit and externalizing behavior with negative impact on IQ scores especially performance IQ.

Highlights

  • Childhood frequent exposure to toxic stress such as abuse or neglect, parental substance abuse or parental mental illness, and violence can have a cumulative impact on the child’s mental health

  • No previous studies have estimated the prevalence of childhood adversity in Egyptian primary school children, so we are guessing that 50% of the primary school children aged 7–11 years have a history of childhood adversity

  • Statistical analysis and comparison focused on the 2 main groups: the less exposed group (48.2 %) and the highly exposed group (49.1%)

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Summary

Introduction

Childhood frequent exposure to toxic stress such as abuse or neglect, parental substance abuse or parental mental illness, and violence can have a cumulative impact on the child’s mental health. The study aimed to assess the association between frequent exposures to family-related adverse experiences and the development of behavioral and cognitive impairment in a random sample of Egyptian primary school children. Adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) or childhood maltreatment indicates some of the major intensive causes of stress that a child possibly suffers early in life. These experiences include neglect, abuse, witnessing violence between parents or caregivers, different kinds of household dysfunction such as parental substance abuse or alcohol addiction, and peer or community violence. It was evidenced that elevated glucocorticoids impair neuronal growth and survival [10]

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