Adverse Childhood Events Are Associated With Physical, Psychological, and Cognitive Health in Menopause
Emma Muller, Pilar Thangwaritorn, Jaime Perales-Puchalt, Melanie Meister, Amber Watts

TL;DR
This study shows that childhood adversity is linked to physical, psychological, and cognitive issues during menopause in women.
Contribution
The study explores how specific types of childhood adversity affect menopause symptoms, offering new insights into midlife health outcomes.
Findings
Higher ACE scores correlate with increased odds of poor memory and sleep difficulties during menopause.
Emotional neglect and abuse are significantly linked to symptoms like anxiety, depression, and cognitive issues.
Findings support the idea that early life events have lasting effects on health into midlife.
Abstract
Adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) can have long term impacts on women’s physical and psychological health and cognition. Despite growing evidence linking ACEs to negative health outcomes, the specific effects on women in midlife are underexplored. We present findings from an online survey of women (N = 98) hypothesizing that higher ACES would be associated with more symptoms reported during the menopause transition. Measures include the ACE-Q, PROMIS depression and anxiety scales, self-reported cognitive complaints, and Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI). Our approach uniquely compares methods of characterizing childhood adversity (number vs. type of exposures). Women from the purposive sample (53.1% non-Hispanic white, 24.5% Hispanic/Latina, 17.3% African American, 8.2% rural-dwelling, 63.3% college-educated and above) were between the ages of 40-62 years of age (M age = 49.47).…
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Taxonomy
TopicsChild Abuse and Trauma · Menopause: Health Impacts and Treatments · Maternal Mental Health During Pregnancy and Postpartum
