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Childhood adversity during the post-apartheid transition and COVID-19 stress independently predict adult PTSD risk in urban South Africa: a biocultural analysis of the stress sensitization hypothesis

Childhood adversity during the post-apartheid transition and COVID-19 stress independently predict adult PTSD risk in urban South Africa: a biocultural analysis of the stress sensitization hypothesis
Childhood adversity during the post-apartheid transition and COVID-19 stress independently predict adult PTSD risk in urban South Africa: a biocultural analysis of the stress sensitization hypothesis
Objectives: the COVID-19 pandemic in South Africa introduced new societal adversities and mental health threats in a country where one in three individuals are expected to develop a psychiatric condition sometime in their life. Scientists have suggested that psychosocial stress and trauma during childhood may increase one's vulnerability to the mental health consequences of future stressors—a process known as stress sensitization. This prospective analysis assessed whether childhood adversity experienced among South African children across the first 18 years of life, coinciding with the post-apartheid transition, exacerbates the mental health impacts of psychosocial stress experienced during the 2019 coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic (ca. 2020–2021).

Materials and methods: data came from 88 adults who participated in a follow-up study of a longitudinal birth cohort study in Soweto, South Africa. Childhood adversity and COVID-19 psychosocial stress were assessed as primary predictors of adult PTSD risk, and an interaction term between childhood adversity and COVID-19 stress was calculated to evaluate the potential effect of stress sensitization.

Results: fifty-six percent of adults exhibited moderate-to-severe PTSD symptoms. Greater childhood adversity and higher COVID-19 psychosocial stress independently predicted worse post-traumatic stress disorder symptoms in adults. Adults who reported greater childhood adversity exhibited non-significantly worse PTSD symptoms from COVID-19 psychosocial stress.

Discussion: these results highlight the deleterious mental health effects of both childhood trauma and COVID-19 psychosocial stress in our sample and emphasize the need for greater and more accessible mental health support as the pandemic progresses in South Africa.
2692-7691
620-631
Kim, Andrew Wooyoung
baef02e6-b25d-42a5-89e6-1907d35aad0a
Mohamed, Rihlat Said
7efbc4a0-5318-48b1-81b6-2c7b12b8c446
Norris, Shane A.
1d346f1b-6d5f-4bca-ac87-7589851b75a4
Naicker, Sara N.
63d43b3a-1905-415a-a8b8-6ab2e67ce98d
Richter, Linda M.
2a818b1f-3798-4e6e-841d-c19bbb74bac2
Kuzawa, Christopher W.
e125754e-ac75-474b-b028-69d010a74d22
Kim, Andrew Wooyoung
baef02e6-b25d-42a5-89e6-1907d35aad0a
Mohamed, Rihlat Said
7efbc4a0-5318-48b1-81b6-2c7b12b8c446
Norris, Shane A.
1d346f1b-6d5f-4bca-ac87-7589851b75a4
Naicker, Sara N.
63d43b3a-1905-415a-a8b8-6ab2e67ce98d
Richter, Linda M.
2a818b1f-3798-4e6e-841d-c19bbb74bac2
Kuzawa, Christopher W.
e125754e-ac75-474b-b028-69d010a74d22

Kim, Andrew Wooyoung, Mohamed, Rihlat Said, Norris, Shane A., Naicker, Sara N., Richter, Linda M. and Kuzawa, Christopher W. (2023) Childhood adversity during the post-apartheid transition and COVID-19 stress independently predict adult PTSD risk in urban South Africa: a biocultural analysis of the stress sensitization hypothesis. American Journal of Biological Anthropology, 182 (4), 620-631. (doi:10.1002/ajpa.24791).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Objectives: the COVID-19 pandemic in South Africa introduced new societal adversities and mental health threats in a country where one in three individuals are expected to develop a psychiatric condition sometime in their life. Scientists have suggested that psychosocial stress and trauma during childhood may increase one's vulnerability to the mental health consequences of future stressors—a process known as stress sensitization. This prospective analysis assessed whether childhood adversity experienced among South African children across the first 18 years of life, coinciding with the post-apartheid transition, exacerbates the mental health impacts of psychosocial stress experienced during the 2019 coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic (ca. 2020–2021).

Materials and methods: data came from 88 adults who participated in a follow-up study of a longitudinal birth cohort study in Soweto, South Africa. Childhood adversity and COVID-19 psychosocial stress were assessed as primary predictors of adult PTSD risk, and an interaction term between childhood adversity and COVID-19 stress was calculated to evaluate the potential effect of stress sensitization.

Results: fifty-six percent of adults exhibited moderate-to-severe PTSD symptoms. Greater childhood adversity and higher COVID-19 psychosocial stress independently predicted worse post-traumatic stress disorder symptoms in adults. Adults who reported greater childhood adversity exhibited non-significantly worse PTSD symptoms from COVID-19 psychosocial stress.

Discussion: these results highlight the deleterious mental health effects of both childhood trauma and COVID-19 psychosocial stress in our sample and emphasize the need for greater and more accessible mental health support as the pandemic progresses in South Africa.

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American Journal of Biological Anthropology - 2023 - Kim - Childhood adversity during the post‐apartheid transition and - Version of Record
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Accepted/In Press date: 24 May 2023
Published date: 7 June 2023

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 505683
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/505683
ISSN: 2692-7691
PURE UUID: c13fb958-6cd1-4740-83f0-952d016cf494
ORCID for Shane A. Norris: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-7124-3788

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Date deposited: 16 Oct 2025 16:45
Last modified: 17 Oct 2025 02:05

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Contributors

Author: Andrew Wooyoung Kim
Author: Rihlat Said Mohamed
Author: Shane A. Norris ORCID iD
Author: Sara N. Naicker
Author: Linda M. Richter
Author: Christopher W. Kuzawa

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