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The long-term health and human capital consequences of adverse childhood experiences in the birth to thirty cohort: single, cumulative, and clustered adversity

The long-term health and human capital consequences of adverse childhood experiences in the birth to thirty cohort: single, cumulative, and clustered adversity
The long-term health and human capital consequences of adverse childhood experiences in the birth to thirty cohort: single, cumulative, and clustered adversity
Human capital—that is the cumulative abilities, education, social skills, and mental and physical health one possesses—is increasingly recognized as key to the reduction of inequality in societies. Adverse childhood experiences have been linked to a range of human capital indicators, with the majority of research in high-income, western settings. This study aims to examine the link between adverse childhood experiences and adult human capital in a South African birth cohort and to test whether associations differ by measurement of adversity. Secondary analysis of data from the Birth to Thirty study was undertaken. Exposure data on adversity was collected prospectively throughout childhood and retrospectively at age 22. Human capital outcomes were collected at age 28. Adversity was measured as single adverse experiences, cumulative adversity, and clustered adversity. All three measurements of adversity were linked to poor human capital outcomes, with risk for poor human capital increasing with the accumulation of adversity. Adversity was clustered by quantity (low versus high) and type (household dysfunction versus abuse). Adversity in childhood was linked to a broad range of negative outcomes in young adulthood regardless of how it was measured. Nevertheless, issues of measurement are important to understand the risk mechanisms that underlie the association between adversity and poor human capital.
adverse childhood experiences, ACEs, human capital, birth cohort, clustered adversity
1660-4601
Naicker, Sara N.
63d43b3a-1905-415a-a8b8-6ab2e67ce98d
Ahun, Marilyn N.
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Besharati, Sahba
2f56d562-9716-4a66-b4d8-4c7ff47df790
Norris, Shane A.
1d346f1b-6d5f-4bca-ac87-7589851b75a4
Orri, Massimiliano
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Richter, Linda M.
2a818b1f-3798-4e6e-841d-c19bbb74bac2
Naicker, Sara N.
63d43b3a-1905-415a-a8b8-6ab2e67ce98d
Ahun, Marilyn N.
97520263-eea1-430f-bafd-723c41854c73
Besharati, Sahba
2f56d562-9716-4a66-b4d8-4c7ff47df790
Norris, Shane A.
1d346f1b-6d5f-4bca-ac87-7589851b75a4
Orri, Massimiliano
c8771cc4-a2fe-4022-8bac-7e0d3292d1db
Richter, Linda M.
2a818b1f-3798-4e6e-841d-c19bbb74bac2

Naicker, Sara N., Ahun, Marilyn N., Besharati, Sahba, Norris, Shane A., Orri, Massimiliano and Richter, Linda M. (2022) The long-term health and human capital consequences of adverse childhood experiences in the birth to thirty cohort: single, cumulative, and clustered adversity. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 19 (3), [1799]. (doi:10.3390/ijerph19031799).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Human capital—that is the cumulative abilities, education, social skills, and mental and physical health one possesses—is increasingly recognized as key to the reduction of inequality in societies. Adverse childhood experiences have been linked to a range of human capital indicators, with the majority of research in high-income, western settings. This study aims to examine the link between adverse childhood experiences and adult human capital in a South African birth cohort and to test whether associations differ by measurement of adversity. Secondary analysis of data from the Birth to Thirty study was undertaken. Exposure data on adversity was collected prospectively throughout childhood and retrospectively at age 22. Human capital outcomes were collected at age 28. Adversity was measured as single adverse experiences, cumulative adversity, and clustered adversity. All three measurements of adversity were linked to poor human capital outcomes, with risk for poor human capital increasing with the accumulation of adversity. Adversity was clustered by quantity (low versus high) and type (household dysfunction versus abuse). Adversity in childhood was linked to a broad range of negative outcomes in young adulthood regardless of how it was measured. Nevertheless, issues of measurement are important to understand the risk mechanisms that underlie the association between adversity and poor human capital.

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ijerph-19-01799-v2 - Version of Record
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Submitted date: 7 January 2022
Accepted/In Press date: 3 February 2022
Published date: 5 February 2022
Keywords: adverse childhood experiences, ACEs, human capital, birth cohort, clustered adversity

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 504419
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/504419
ISSN: 1660-4601
PURE UUID: 58d54ac7-6a05-4035-99b8-cdd0024059db
ORCID for Shane A. Norris: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-7124-3788

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Date deposited: 09 Sep 2025 16:56
Last modified: 11 Sep 2025 03:09

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Contributors

Author: Sara N. Naicker
Author: Marilyn N. Ahun
Author: Sahba Besharati
Author: Shane A. Norris ORCID iD
Author: Massimiliano Orri
Author: Linda M. Richter

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