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Does childhood trauma predict impulsive spending in later life? An analysis of the mediating roles of impulsivity and emotion regulation

Does childhood trauma predict impulsive spending in later life? An analysis of the mediating roles of impulsivity and emotion regulation
Does childhood trauma predict impulsive spending in later life? An analysis of the mediating roles of impulsivity and emotion regulation
We sought to investigate whether adverse childhood experiences increase impulsive spending in later life, and whether emotion dysregulation and impulsivity mediate this association. Limited research has examined associations between these factors, and examining the mechanisms involved may inform interventions for impulsive spending. This study used a cross-sectional, correlational design including 189 adult participants who completed an online survey assessing childhood trauma, adverse childhood experiences, impulsive spending, impulsivity, and emotion dysregulation. Greater adverse childhood experiences and childhood trauma were positively correlated with impulsive spending, as well as general impulsivity and emotion dysregulation. Mediation analyses indicated that emotion dysregulation and greater impulsivity accounted for the positive relationship between childhood trauma and impulse spending. Adverse childhood experiences and childhood trauma are associated with increased risk of impulse spending in adulthood via elevated general impulsivity and emotion dysregulation.
Adverse childhood experiences, Childhood trauma, Emotion dysregulation, Impulsive spending, Impulsivity
1936-153X
275-281
Richardson, Thomas
f8d84122-b061-4322-a594-5ef2eb5cad0d
Egglishaw, Annelise
3c62f975-2be1-4058-b275-b75912e3ad96
Sood, Monica
185fb97e-a111-45e1-bbe8-d865d301ef9f
Richardson, Thomas
f8d84122-b061-4322-a594-5ef2eb5cad0d
Egglishaw, Annelise
3c62f975-2be1-4058-b275-b75912e3ad96
Sood, Monica
185fb97e-a111-45e1-bbe8-d865d301ef9f

Richardson, Thomas, Egglishaw, Annelise and Sood, Monica (2024) Does childhood trauma predict impulsive spending in later life? An analysis of the mediating roles of impulsivity and emotion regulation. Journal of Child & Adolescent Trauma, 17 (2), 275-281. (doi:10.1007/s40653-023-00600-7).

Record type: Article

Abstract

We sought to investigate whether adverse childhood experiences increase impulsive spending in later life, and whether emotion dysregulation and impulsivity mediate this association. Limited research has examined associations between these factors, and examining the mechanisms involved may inform interventions for impulsive spending. This study used a cross-sectional, correlational design including 189 adult participants who completed an online survey assessing childhood trauma, adverse childhood experiences, impulsive spending, impulsivity, and emotion dysregulation. Greater adverse childhood experiences and childhood trauma were positively correlated with impulsive spending, as well as general impulsivity and emotion dysregulation. Mediation analyses indicated that emotion dysregulation and greater impulsivity accounted for the positive relationship between childhood trauma and impulse spending. Adverse childhood experiences and childhood trauma are associated with increased risk of impulse spending in adulthood via elevated general impulsivity and emotion dysregulation.

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Richardson, Egglishaw, & Sood 2023 - Childhood trauma and impulsive spending - Version of Record
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Accepted/In Press date: 11 December 2023
e-pub ahead of print date: 5 January 2024
Published date: June 2024
Keywords: Adverse childhood experiences, Childhood trauma, Emotion dysregulation, Impulsive spending, Impulsivity

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 495523
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/495523
ISSN: 1936-153X
PURE UUID: 927764b5-6233-4e77-85da-0b0625b8d34e
ORCID for Thomas Richardson: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-5357-4281
ORCID for Monica Sood: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-3242-7925

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Date deposited: 15 Nov 2024 17:54
Last modified: 14 Dec 2024 03:10

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Contributors

Author: Annelise Egglishaw
Author: Monica Sood ORCID iD

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