# The influence of childhood maltreatment on substance use among students in Gondar Town, Northwest Ethiopia: the mediating role of social support

**Authors:** Angwach Abrham Asnake, Asefa Adimasu Taddese, Mehari Woldemariam Merid

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fpsyt.2025.1559939 · 2025-06-17

## TL;DR

Childhood maltreatment increases substance use among students in Ethiopia, but social support can reduce this risk.

## Contribution

This study is one of the few in Ethiopia to examine how social support mediates the link between childhood maltreatment and substance use.

## Key findings

- 85.42% of students reported childhood maltreatment, with emotional and physical neglect strongly linked to substance use.
- Social support reduced the impact of maltreatment on substance use by 28.30%.
- Physical abuse, sexual abuse, and emotional abuse were most strongly associated with increased substance use.

## Abstract

Childhood maltreatment increases the risk of substance use and substance use disorder (SUD) in adolescence and adulthood, with social support potentially mitigating this relationship. However, research in Ethiopia on mediating factors remains limited. This study uses structural equation modeling (SEM) to evaluate the influence of childhood maltreatment on substance use and the mediating role of social support among students in Gondar Town, Northwest Ethiopia.

A cross-sectional study was conducted from April 18 to May 9, 2023, among 1,235 preparatory and public high school students in Gondar Town who were selected via simple random sampling. Childhood maltreatment was assessed using the Childhood Trauma Questionnaire (CTQ), which yields a total score ranging from 28 to 140. For descriptive analysis, scores were categorized as “none” for values between 25 and 36 or as “some form of childhood maltreatment” for scores above 37. Substance use was measured using the Tobacco, Alcohol, Prescription Medication, and Other Substance Use (TAPS-1) tool. Problematic substance use was defined as any response greater than “never” within the past 12 months. Social support was evaluated using the Multidimensional Scale of Perceived Social Support (MSPSS). Structural equation modeling analyzed the relationships, calculating the mediation proportion.

The median age was 17 years, with 63.24% female participants. Of the students, 85.42% reported a history of childhood maltreatment, 23.48% had problematic alcohol use, and 10.04% had problematic drug use in the past 12 months. Childhood maltreatment significantly increased substance use (β = 1.181, 95% CI (lower, upper): 0.223–1.821). Specific maltreatment types—physical abuse (β = 1.422, 95% CI (lower, upper): 0.590–2.423), sexual abuse (β = 0.653, 95% CI (lower, upper): 0.652–1.320), emotional abuse (β = 2.252, 95% CI (lower, upper): 1.402–4.307), physical neglect (β = 4.101, 95% CI (lower, upper): 1.042–0.904), and emotional neglect (β = 1.513, 95% CI (lower, upper): 0.831–3.059)—were positively associated with substance use. Social support negatively mediated 28.30% of this relationship, reducing the effect of maltreatment on substance use.

Physical abuse, sexual abuse, emotional abuse, physical neglect, and emotional neglect all increase the likelihood of substance use. However, social support mitigates the relationship between childhood maltreatment and substance use. These findings highlight the need for interventions strengthening social support to mitigate the impact of maltreatment on substance use in Ethiopia.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** emotional neglect (MESH:D058069), sexual abuse (MESH:D000082002), alcohol use (MESH:D000437), Physical abuse (MESH:D059445), Trauma (MESH:D014947), Childhood maltreatment (MESH:D063766), SUD (MESH:D019966)
- **Chemicals:** Alcohol (MESH:D000438)

## Figures

4 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12209226/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12209226