Abstract

Converging empirical evidence indicates that exposure to adversity in childhood is associated with increased vulnerability to mental health problems in adulthood. As early life adversity has the potential to alter an individual’s appraisal of threat, we hypothesized that individuals exposed to adversity in childhood may also exhibit increased threat from environmental stressors, which in turn may impact their state anxiety levels. We examined the relations between adverse childhood experiences, assessed using the Adverse Childhood Experiences Scale (ACEs), perceived threat from COVID-19, and state anxiety in a sample of adults. Additionally, flexibility is implicated in adaptive coping with life’s stressors so we also assessed participants’ cognitive flexibility. Parallel mediation regression analyses revealed that both perceived threat from COVID-19 and flexibility in the appraisal of challenges mediated the influence of maltreatment, but not household dysfunction, on state anxiety. Our data indicate that experience with early life adversity in the form of maltreatment is associated with increased perceived threat from COVID-19, which results in higher anxiety levels for the individual. In contrast, childhood maltreatment is associated with reduced flexibility in appraising challenges, which in turn mediates the relationship between maltreatment and anxiety. The findings of this study adds to the limited literature on the impact of early life adversity on cognitive flexibility and highlights the psychological toll of COVID-19 on individuals who have been exposed to adverse childhood experiences.

Highlights

  • Stressful experiences, such as living through a global pandemic of a highly communicable disease, can have a profound impact on an individual’s life

  • Because the relation between early adversity and cognitive flexibility is less studied [11], and deficits in cognitive flexibility are associated with anxious behavior [42]; we investigated the role of cognitive flexibility in the relationship between early life adversity and anxiety

  • Participants completed the questionnaires in this order: cognitive flexibility inventory (CFI), state trait anxiety inventory (STAI short form), adverse childhood experiences scale (ACEs), and perceived threat of COVID-19, assessed through a series of questions embedded in the demographics section of the survey

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Summary

Introduction

Stressful experiences, such as living through a global pandemic of a highly communicable disease, can have a profound impact on an individual’s life. Described as pneumonia with an unidentified cause on 31st December 2019, the outbreak of COVID-19 was declared a Public Health Emergency of International Concern on 20th January, 2020 (Ho et al, 2020). Over 44 million individuals worldwide (nearly 9 million in the United States) have tested positive for COVID-19, and over 1.16 million individuals (nearly 227,000 in the United States) have died as result of exposure to the outbreak. Past research with the H1N1 pandemic ( known as ‘swine flu’) has demonstrated that pandemics are associated with increased. Childhood maltreatment influences anxiety through cognitive flexibility and perceived threat from COVID-19

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