scholarly journals Alcohol abstention in early adulthood and premature mortality: Do early life factors, social support, and health explain this association?

2016 ◽  
Vol 163 ◽  
pp. 71-79 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rebecca J. Evans-Polce ◽  
Jeremy Staff ◽  
Jennifer L. Maggs
2020 ◽  
Vol 79 (OCE2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Juliana Nyasordzi ◽  
Katharina Penczynski ◽  
Thomas Remer ◽  
Anette Buyken

AbstractIntroductionEarly life factors may predispose an offspring to cardiovascular risk factors in later life. It is plausible a range of exposures in early life may be involved in this predisposition, which may extend to “healthy” populations in Western populations.We examined the association between a number of early life factors with the carotid intima-media thickness (IMT), a surrogate marker of atherosclerosis, in early adulthood of a healthy German population.MethodsWe studied term participants (n = 265) of the DONALD Study, with a bilateral sonographic measurement of the IMT in young adulthood (18–40 years) and data on early life factors (maternal and paternal age at child birth, birth weight (including appropriateness of birth weight- for gestational age), gestational weight gain and full breastfeeding (breastfeeding > 17weeks). Sonographic IMT measurements were performed on the left and right common carotid artery using a minimum of 4 measurements. Mean IMT values were obtained averaging the measurements from both sides, an overall average obtained from 8 and 16 measurement of both sides was used for this analysis. Information on gestation and birth were abstracted from the “Mutterpass”, maternal and paternal age at birth were inquired at study entry and breastfeeding information was assessed prospectively. Prospective association between early life factors and IMT were analyzed using multivariable linear regression models, considering age at IMT measurement, physician taking the measurement, in addition: birth year, first born status, maternal and paternal educational status, maternal overweight, presence of smokers in the household tested for potential confounding.ResultsMean adult IMT was 0.56mm ± 0.03, range: 0.41mm-0.78 mm. Maternal age at child birth was of prospective relevance for IMT in young adulthood, however, this association was sex specific: Increased maternal age at child birth was independently associated with an increased IMT among female offspring during young adulthood (β 0.029, SE 0.009) mm/decade, P = 0.003) only, this was not mediated by adult waist circumference. None of the remaining early life factors showed relevance for adult IMT levels among males and females in early adulthood.ConclusionThis study suggests that advanced maternal age at child birth is of prospective relevance for IMT levels in younger adulthood in a healthy Western population. This association appears to be sex specific, with maternal age at child birth positively associated with IMT in females in early adulthood only.


PLoS ONE ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 16 (6) ◽  
pp. e0251859
Author(s):  
Sitong Shen ◽  
Zhaohua Chen ◽  
Xuemei Qin ◽  
Mengjia Zhang ◽  
Qin Dai

Resilience is important for people to maintain mental health after negative life-events. However, its longitudinal psychological and social predictors are poorly revealed. Based on the ecological system theory model, the current study aimed to determine the longitudinal temporal mechanism underlying the development of early-adulthood resilience using long-term (early-life trauma and personality), medium-term and short-term (life-events, social support, and depression) psychosocial predictors. A total of 505 university students were recruited at baseline (T1), 433 of whom took part in a three-year longitudinal investigation (T2). The results showed that at T1 and T2, the resilience scores of individuals were identically high (72.98 and 73.21, respectively). Pearson correlation analysis showed that early-adulthood resilience was negatively correlated with early-life trauma, psychoticism and neuroticism, depression, ad life-events, and positively correlated with extraversion, social-support, and resilience. Regression and structural equation models showed that extraversion had a direct positive effect on T1 resilience through the mediation of T1 life-events, depression, and social-support, while childhood emotional neglect (EN) had indirect negative effect and extraversion had direct positive effect on T2 resilience through the mediation of T1 resilience, and T2 depression and social-support. In conclusion, this study is among the first to reveal the longitudinal temporal process of the development of early-adulthood resilience using remote and adjacent psychosocial predictors. The findings confirm that childhood EN and extraversion have a remote impact on early-adulthood resilience through recent and current depression and social-support. Our results imply that early-life trauma does not hinder the development of early-adulthood resilience in a linear trend.


PLoS ONE ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 15 (5) ◽  
pp. e0233227
Author(s):  
Juliana Nyasordzi ◽  
Katharina Penczynski ◽  
Thomas Remer ◽  
Anette E. Buyken

2020 ◽  
Vol 4 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. 395-396
Author(s):  
Tyler Bruefach ◽  
Dawn Carr

Abstract Growing evidence shows that individuals who have high levels of psychological resilience maintain higher levels of physical and psychological health in later life. Individuals cultivate psychological resilience over the life course, yet little research has explored its mechanistic effects on health during midlife. One source of resilience may be formal education, which is a well-established determinant of health in adulthood. Resilience might be one reason for this robust association, as education helps individuals develop greater psychological resources in adulthood. On the other hand, having a college degree also increases access to other health-promoting resources that can be leveraged over the life course, such as better-paying and higher-quality jobs. Using data drawn from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health (Add Health), the current paper examines: 1) how early-life factors shape psychological resilience in early adulthood (24-32 years); and 2) the effects of early adulthood resilience on the association between education and health in mid-life (36-44 years). Results show that psychological resilience and college education have significant direct effects on health in midlife, net of health in early adulthood. However, first-generation college graduates cultivate more psychological resilience from their educational attainment than do those with college-educated parents. That is, higher education serves as a leveler for health gaps in midlife for those with fewer resources available in early life by bolstering resilience. These results provide important insights about how early life factors play an important role in shaping successful aging processes.


Author(s):  
Juliana Nyasordzi ◽  
Johanna Conrad ◽  
Janina Goletzke ◽  
Helena Ludwig-Walz ◽  
Christian Herder ◽  
...  

2014 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sarah J. Spann ◽  
Negar Fani ◽  
Bekh Bradley ◽  
Kerry Ressler

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document