A history of child abuse impacts rates of suicide, substance abuse, and personality disorder in depressed inpatients
According to a new Mayo Clinic study, a history of child
abuse significantly impacts the wide range of challenges facing depressed inpatients.
Included are an increase in suicide attempts, prevalence of substance use disorder,
and a higher incidence rate of personality disorder. Additionally, these victims
also had an earlier onset of mental illness and an increase in psychiatric hospitalizations
for psychiatric issues. The study was presented at the American Psychiatric Association
2009 Annual Meeting in San Francisco.
The impact of child abuse already is known to increase
the risk of suicide, however the literature about other characteristics of depressed
victims of child abuse is scarce. Although the findings of the Mayo study do not
confirm causality, the information stresses the importance of more aggressive
approaches from the public health perspective to prevent child abuse. "A
history of child abuse makes most psychiatric illnesses worse," according
to Magdalena Romanowicz, M.D., of the Mayo Clinic and lead author of the study.
"We found that it significantly impacts the wide range of characteristics
of depressed inpatients including increased risk of suicide attempt, substance
abuse, as well as earlier onset of mental illness and more psychiatric hospitalizations.
This new information serves as a reminder of the importance of child abuse prevention
from a public health perspective."
Dr. Romanowicz says plans are under way to further examine
the association between child abuse and metal illness in a larger study of patients.
Other authors of this study include: Gen Shinozaki, M.D.;
Victoria Passov, M.D.; Simon Kung, M.D.; Renato Alarcon, M.D.; and David Mrazek,
M.D.
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