Adverse Childhood Experiences Clinical Trial
Official title:
Family Resilience Initiative Research Program
University Le Bonheur Pediatric Specialists (ULPS) and Le Bonheur Community Health and Well-Being, Maternal Child Department, have started the Family Resilience Initiative (FRI) in the ULPS General Pediatrics Clinic. This clinical program screens children 9 to 48 months of age for Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs) and Social Determinants of Health (SDH) at the time of presentation for well child checks. Children with positive screens for ACES and/or SDH, and their adult caregivers, receive community resource referrals with warm handoffs to vetted organizations. In addition, if indicated, psychological services are offered for children based upon the presence of one or more of ACEs and current health, social, and behavioral problems. It is expected that enrollment in FRI will improve quality of life for families through reduction in stress by addressing unmet social needs and providing psychological counseling of children and families with any ACE exposure. The investigators expect that FRI will have a positive impact on the physical health, healthcare utilization, mental health, development, and school readiness of children in the program compared to controls. The investigators will compare changes in weight for height and blood pressure percentiles at enrollment and end of study and the number of unscheduled healthcare visit for illness for children in the FRI clinical program compared to controls, receiving standard of care. Healthcare visits include visits to the clinic and visits to the Le Bonheur Emergency Department. The investigators will also compare pre- and post-treatment scores on the validated Child Behavior Checklist and Parenting Stress Index as a measure of stress reduction. Furthermore, the investigators will measure age appropriate attainment of developmental milestones scores on early, school-based testing (MAP) testing scores obtained through Seeding Success. The investigators will also determine rates of physician-diagnosed early behavioral disorders such as ADHD. The investigators expect that reduced stress and its downstream conditions will lead to decreased healthcare visits, improved attainment of developmental and educational milestones, and lower rates of behavioral disorders.
Adverse childhood experiences (ACEs), social determinants of health (SDH) and their
downstream health effects are the public health crisis of our time. Many chronic diseases are
known to originate with, or are exacerbated by, exposure to toxic stress in childhood
including learning and cognitive disabilities, asthma, obesity, diabetes, cancer, and
behavioral health disorders such as ADHD, depression and substance abuse. While poverty is
not considered an ACE, ACE exposure and unmet social needs are more common in those living in
lower income communities. Memphis, the poorest statistical metropolitan area in the country
with a population over one million people has an overall poverty rate of 26.9% and a child
poverty rate of 44.7%. A telephone survey of over 1500 Shelby County residents conducted in
the summer of 2014 found that 52% of adults reported at least one ACE and 12% reported four
or more. Race is also an important factor in health disparities. Although the effects of race
are predominantly due to associated income inequities, systemic racism can also have effects
on health. For example, disparities in birth outcomes between black and white mothers exists
across all socioeconomic strata but is most prominent among highly educated African American
women.
The association between poverty and ill health is likely mediated through several pathways.
In impoverished households there may be limited cognitive stimulation and neglect. Poor
quality and location of housing may expose children to environmental toxins such as lead or
air pollution and allergens. Poor diet may result in micronutrient deprivation. In addition
to these known negative exposures, environmental stress through exposure to familial discord
and disruption, intrafamily violence, overcrowding of the home, and neighborhood violence
appears also to play a role in the poor mental and physical health of individuals with these
exposures.
The link between toxic stress from ACES and other social determinants of health and adverse
physical and mental health outcomes is derived from mostly cross-sectional studies where
individuals with and without certain health conditions are compared for exposure to ACEs and
SDH. These studies have been critical in revealing the spectrum of childhood and adult
conditions that may be triggered or exacerbated by toxic stress. Both acute severe stress
stemming from exposures like child maltreatment and chronic lower grade stresses stemming
from exposure to poverty and its associated risks are associated with physical and mental
illness. Much of the research into the mechanisms underpinning these associations has
examined the epigenetic effect of these episodic or longer-term stressors. Epigenetics refers
to post-translational modifications of DNA such as methylation, the covalent binding of
methyl groups at CpG sites, oligodeoxynucleotides where cytosine is adjacent to guanine.
Changes in methylation patterns can result from de novo methylation of DNA or removal of
pre-existing methylation sites. Most epigenetic changes influence gene transcription through
methylation of promotor and repressor regions. A gene promotor containing methylated CpG
sequences is less able to bind transcription factors resulting in reduced gene transcription.
Many studies have found differential methylation of areas within genes as well as intergenic
areas of DNA. The effect these areas of methylation have on gene expression are unknown.
Histones, proteins around which DNA is coiled, can be modified as well through methylation
and acetylation. These modifications are thought to relax DNA coiling and open up gene
regulatory sites for interaction with transcription factors.
There have been studies examining differences in methylation across the genome, comparing the
number of sites with increased and reduced methylation and drawing inferences as to the
effect of these differences on phenotype. Many such studies have demonstrated clear
differences in methylation patterns between subjects with greater and lesser exposure to
episodic and lifetime stress. Differential methylation of specific genes and their promotor
regions have also been studied, specifically, genes that could be reasonably hypothesized to
play a role in the response to stress and the mitigating effects of different levels of
caregiving. These include the genes for the glucocorticoid receptor, serotonin and oxytocin.
The effects of chronically or acutely elevated cortisol levels on the methylation of the
glucocorticoid receptor gene and its promotor are, perhaps, the most extensively studied in
relation to ACEs and SDH. Animal studies have demonstrated an effect of high levels of
caregiving on levels of glucocorticoid receptor expression in key areas of the brain through
epigenetic changes which can improve self-regulation and mitigate the effects of toxic
stress. These epigenetic modifications have been demonstrated to be transmitted across
generations and may account for cross generational protection or vulnerability to the effects
of toxic stress.
Most human data on the effects of epigenetics are derived from retrospective and
cross-sectional studies in which individuals with certain health conditions report on past or
current exposure to ACEs and/or SDH. Many of these studies examine the cumulative risk of
exposure over the lifetime of the study subject up to the point of the research. There does
appear to be a dose response relationship between earlier stressors and adolescent and adult
mental and physical health. Interventions applied early may, therefore, have the potential to
mitigate the effects of toxic stress on health even if exposures have already occurred and
prevent these important, long-term impacts on health and well-being. Mitigating factors
include high family functioning with lower levels of parental stress and greater parent-child
communication, as well as access to a medical home.
Primary care is the cornerstone for screening, health promotion and disease prevention and
pediatricians are best situated to screen for and address ACEs and SDH. Studies have
demonstrated that many physicians do not perform any formal screening for ACEs but that
individuals and families, when approached in a family-centered manner, want their physicians
to screen for stressors and unmet social needs, even though it involves answering sensitive
questions.
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