Abstract

Childhood adverse life events, in particular illness-related events, have been proposed as a risk factor for development of health anxiety. ObjectiveTo examine: 1) The association between accumulated early adverse life events and health anxiety in adulthood and 2) The influence of specific types of life events, i.e., illness, injury, loss, and the impact of their exposure time on health anxiety in adulthood. MethodA population-based, cross-sectional study including 7454 participants from the Danish study of Functional Disorders (DanFunD). Health anxiety was assessed with Whiteley-6-R and early adverse life events with the Cumulative Lifetime Adversity Measure. Caseness was defined as a Whiteley-6-R score ≥ 90%ile. Generalised linear models were used to estimate the association with relative risk (RRa, adjusted for sociodemographics). ResultsA cumulative effect was found for each additional adverse life event with 8.03% increased risk of health anxiety. Two categories were associated with a higher risk: violence (RRa = 1.65, 95% CI: 1.37–1.99, P < 0.001) and relationship stress (RRa = 1.34; 95% CI: 1.15–1.57, P < 0.001). Respondents with self-reported childhood illness were also more likely to report health anxiety (RRa = 1.52, 95% CI 1.11–2.09, P = 0.009). Timewise, health anxiety seemed associated with illness during school age and injury during adolescence. ConclusionsAccumulated adverse life events, early exposure to specific categories and specific health-related life events were associated with self-reported health anxiety in adulthood. Our findings provide new knowledge on the potential role of early life events in health anxiety which could inform early intervention.

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