Mortality after Parental Death in Childhood: A Nationwide Cohort Study from Three Nordic Countries
Background:
Bereavement by spousal death and child death in adulthood has been shown to lead to an increased risk of mortality. Maternal death in infancy or parental death in early childhood may have an impact on mortality but evidence has been limited to short-term or selected causes of death. Little is known about long-term or cause-specific mortality after parental death in childhood.
Methods and Findings:
This cohort study included all persons born in Denmark from 1968 to 2008 (n = 2,789,807) and in Sweden from 1973 to 2006 (n = 3,380,301), and a random sample of 89.3% of all born in Finland from 1987 to 2007 (n = 1,131,905). A total of 189,094 persons were included in the exposed cohort when they lost a parent before 18 years old. Log-linear Poisson regression was used to estimate mortality rate ratio (MRR). Parental death was associated with a 50% increased all-cause mortality (MRR = 1.50, 95% CI 1.43–1.58). The risks were increased for most specific cause groups and the highest MRRs were observed when the cause of child death and the cause of parental death were in the same category. Parental unnatural death was associated with a higher mortality risk (MRR = 1.84, 95% CI 1.71–2.00) than parental natural death (MRR = 1.33, 95% CI 1.24–1.41). The magnitude of the associations varied according to type of death and age at bereavement over different follow-up periods. The main limitation of the study is the lack of data on post-bereavement information on the quality of the parent-child relationship, lifestyles, and common physical environment.
Conclusions:
Parental death in childhood or adolescence is associated with increased all-cause mortality into early adulthood. Since an increased mortality reflects both genetic susceptibility and long-term impacts of parental death on health and social well-being, our findings have implications in clinical responses and public health strategies.
Please see later in the article for the Editors' Summary
Vyšlo v časopise:
Mortality after Parental Death in Childhood: A Nationwide Cohort Study from Three Nordic Countries. PLoS Med 11(7): e32767. doi:10.1371/journal.pmed.1001679
Kategorie:
Research Article
prolekare.web.journal.doi_sk:
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.1001679
Souhrn
Background:
Bereavement by spousal death and child death in adulthood has been shown to lead to an increased risk of mortality. Maternal death in infancy or parental death in early childhood may have an impact on mortality but evidence has been limited to short-term or selected causes of death. Little is known about long-term or cause-specific mortality after parental death in childhood.
Methods and Findings:
This cohort study included all persons born in Denmark from 1968 to 2008 (n = 2,789,807) and in Sweden from 1973 to 2006 (n = 3,380,301), and a random sample of 89.3% of all born in Finland from 1987 to 2007 (n = 1,131,905). A total of 189,094 persons were included in the exposed cohort when they lost a parent before 18 years old. Log-linear Poisson regression was used to estimate mortality rate ratio (MRR). Parental death was associated with a 50% increased all-cause mortality (MRR = 1.50, 95% CI 1.43–1.58). The risks were increased for most specific cause groups and the highest MRRs were observed when the cause of child death and the cause of parental death were in the same category. Parental unnatural death was associated with a higher mortality risk (MRR = 1.84, 95% CI 1.71–2.00) than parental natural death (MRR = 1.33, 95% CI 1.24–1.41). The magnitude of the associations varied according to type of death and age at bereavement over different follow-up periods. The main limitation of the study is the lack of data on post-bereavement information on the quality of the parent-child relationship, lifestyles, and common physical environment.
Conclusions:
Parental death in childhood or adolescence is associated with increased all-cause mortality into early adulthood. Since an increased mortality reflects both genetic susceptibility and long-term impacts of parental death on health and social well-being, our findings have implications in clinical responses and public health strategies.
Please see later in the article for the Editors' Summary
Zdroje
1. Stroebe MS, Hansson RO, Schut H, Stroebe W (2008) Handbook of bereavement research and practice: advances in theory and intervention. Washington (D.C.): American Psychological Association.
2. ChristakisNA, AllisonPD (2006) Mortality after the hospitalization of a spouse. New Engl J Med 354: 719–730.
3. StroebeM, SchutH, StroebeW (2007) Health outcomes of bereavement. Lancet 370: 1960–1973.
4. LevavI, FriedlanderY, KarkJD, PeritzE (1988) An epidemiologic study of mortality among bereaved parents. N Engl J Med 319: 457–461.
5. LiJ, PrechtDH, MortensenPB, OlsenJ (2003) Mortality in parents after death of a child in Denmark: a nationwide follow-up study. Lancet 361: 363–367.
6. CampbellCD, LeeJZ (2009) Long-term mortality consequences of childhood family context in Liaoning, China, 1749–1909. Soc Sci Med 68: 1641–1648.
7. RonsmansC, ChowdhuryME, DasguptaSK, AhmedA, KoblinskyM (2005) Effect of parent's death on child survival in rural Bangladesh: a cohort study. Lancet 375: 2024–2031.
8. SearR, SteeleF, McGregorIA, MaceR (2002) The effects of kin on child mortality in rural Gambia. Demography 39: 43–63.
9. PavardS, GagnonA, DesjardinsB, HeyerE (2005) Mother's death and child survival: the case of early Quebec. J Biosoc Sci 37: 209–227.
10. WillfuhrKP (2009) Short- and long-term consequences of early parental loss in the historical population of the Krummhorn (18th and 19th century). Am J Hum Biol 21: 488–500.
11. US Bureau of the Census (1990) Statistical abstracts of the US 1990. Washington (D.C.): US Government Printing Office.
12. BatesonP, BarkerD, Clutton-BrockT, DebD, D'UdineB, et al. (2004) Developmental plasticity and human health. Nature 430: 419–421.
13. GluckmanPD, HansonMA, CooperC, ThornburgKL (2008) Effect of in utero and early-life conditions on adult health and disease. New Engl J Med 359: 61–73.
14. QinP, AgerboE, MortensenPB (2002) Suicide risk in relation to family history of completed suicide and psychiatric disorders: a nested case-control study based on longitudinal registers. Lancet 360: 1126–1130.
15. WilcoxHC, KuramotoSJ, LichtensteinP, LangstromN, BrentDA, et al. (2010) Psychiatric morbidity, violent crime, and suicide among children and adolescents exposed to parental death. J Am Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry 49: 514–523.
16. MarenbergME, RischN, BerkmanLF, FloderusB, de FaireU (1994) Genetic susceptibility to death from coronary heart disease in a study of twins. New Engl J Med 330: 1041–1046.
17. Wellcome Trust Case Caontrol Consortium (2007) Genome-wide association study of 14,000 cases of seven common diseases and 3,000 shared controls. Nature 447: 661–678.
18. McGirrA, AldaM, SeguinM, CabotS, LesageA, et al. (2009) Familial aggregation of suicide explained by cluster B traits: a three-group family study of suicide controlling for major depressive disorder. Am J Psychiatry 166: 1124–1134.
19. Luecken LJ (2008) Long-term consequences of parental death in childhood: psychological and physiological manifestations. Stroebe MS, Hansson RO, Schut H, Stroebe W, editors. Handbook of bereavement research and practice: advances in theory and intervention. Washington (D.C.): American Psychological Association. pp. 397–416.
20. MelhemNM, PortaG, ShamseddeenW, Walker PayneM, BrentDA (2011) Grief in children and adolescents bereaved by sudden parental death. Arch Gen Psychiatry 68: 911–919.
21. MackenbachJP, StirbuI, RoskamAJ, SchaapMM, MenvielleG, et al. (2008) Socioeconomic inequalities in health in 22 European Countries. New Engl J Med 358: 2468–2481.
22. MackenbachJP, KunstAE, CavelaarsAnE, GroenhofF, GeurtsJJ (1997) Socioeconomic inequalities in morbidity and mortality in western Europe. Lancet 349: 1655–1659.
23. LauC, AmbalavananN, ChakrabortyH, WingateMS, CarloWA (2013) Extremely low birth weight and infant mortality rates in the United States. Pediatrics 131: 855–860.
24. GlinianaiaS, GhoshR, RankinJ, PearceM, ParkerL, et al. (2013) No improvement in socioeconomic inequalities in birthweight and preterm birth over four decades: a population-based cohort study. BMC Public Health 13: 345.
25. CallaghanW, MacDormanM, RasmussenS, QinC, LackritzEM (2006) The contribution of preterm birth to infant mortality rates in the United States. Pediatrics 118: 1566–1573.
26. LiJ, VestergaardM, ObelC, CnattingusS, GisslerM, et al. (2010) Cohort profile: the Nordic perinatal bereavement cohort. Int J Epidemiol 40: 1161–1167.
27. FrankL (2000) Epidemiology. When an entire country is a cohort. Science 287: 2398–2399.
28. Office for National Statistics (2005) Mortality statistics: childhood, infant and perinatal, England and Wales. London: ONS.
29. UNICEF (2011) The state of the world's children 2011: adolescence - an age of opportunity. Available: http://www.unicef.org/publications/files/SOWC_2011_Main_Report_EN_02242011.pdf. Accessed on 5 June 2014).
30. Andersen PK, Borgan Ø, Gill RD, Keiding N (1995) Statistical models based on counting processes. Berlin: Springer.
31. RostilaM, SaarelaJ (2011) Time doesn't heal all wounds: mortality following the death of a parent. J Marriage Fam 73: 236–249.
32. EastL, JacksonD, O'BrienL (2006) Father absence and adolescent development: a review of the literature. Journal of Child Health Care 10: 283–295.
33. McLanahanS, TachL, SchneiderD (2013) The causal effects of father absence. Annu Rev Sociol 399: 399–427, 399-427, 399-427.
34. Richter L, Morrell R. (2006) Baba: men and fatherhood in South Africa. Cape Town: HSRC Press.
35. DietzLJ, StoyakS, MelhemN, PortaG, MatthewsKA, et al. (2013) Cortisol response to social stress in parentally bereaved youth. Biol Psychiatry 73: 379–387.
36. TyrkaAR, WierL, PriceLH, RossN, AndersonGM, et al. (2008) Childhood parental loss and adult hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal function. Biol Psychiatry 63: 1147–1154.
37. AlciatiA, GesueleF, CasazzaG, FoschiD (2013) The relationship between childhood parental loss and metabolic syndrome in obese subjects. Stress Health 29: 5–13.
38. GiovanoliS, EnglerH, EnglerA, RichettoJ, VogetM, et al. (2013) Stress in puberty unmasks latent neuropathological consequences of prenatal immune activation in mice. Science 339: 1095–1099.
39. HamdanS, MazariegosD, MelhemNM, PortaG, WalkerPM, et al. (2012) Effect of parental bereavement on health risk behaviors in youth: a 3-year follow-up. Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med 166: 216–223.
40. FelittiVJ, AndaRF, NordenbergD, WilliamsonDF, SpitzAM, et al. (1998) Relationship of childhood abuse and household dysfunction to many of the leading causes of death in adults: the adverse childhood experiences (ACE) study. Am J Prev Med 14: 245–258.
41. ChristGH, SiegelK, ChristAE (2002) Adolescent grief: “it never really hit me… until it actually happened”. JAMA 288: 1269–1278.
42. PfefferCR, KarusD, SiegelK, JiangH (2000) Child survivors of parental death from cancer or suicide: depressive and behavioral outcomes. Psychooncology 9: 1–10.
43. WolchikS, TeinJY, SandlerI, AyersT (2006) Stressors, quality of the child-caregiver relationship, and children's mental health problems after parental death: the mediating role of self-system beliefs. J Abnorm Child Psychol 34: 212–229.
44. TyrkaAR, WierL, PriceLH, RossNS, CarpenterLL (2008) Childhood parental loss and adult psychopathology: effects of loss characteristics and contextual factors. Int J Psychiatry Med 38: 329–344.
45. BylundGT (2013) Self-injury in teenagers who lost a parent to cancer: a nationwide, population-based, long-term follow-up. JAMA Pediatrics 167: 133–140.
46. BinderEB, BradleyRG, LiuW, EpsteinMP, DeveauTC, et al. (2008) Association of FKBP5 polymorphisms and childhood abuse with risk of posttraumatic stress disorder symptoms in adults. JAMA 299: 1291–1305.
47. McGowanPO, SasakiA, D'AlessioAC, DymovS, LabonteB, et al. (2009) Epigenetic regulation of the glucocorticoid receptor in human brain associates with childhood abuse. Nat Neurosci 12: 342–348.
48. KuramotoSJ, StuartEA, RunesonB, LichtensteinP, LaangstromN, et al. (2010) Maternal or paternal suicide and offspring's psychiatric and suicide-attempt hospitalization risk. Pediatrics 126: e1026–e1032.
49. BlankNM, Werner-LinA (2011) Growing up with grief: revisiting the death of a parent over the life course. Omega (Westport) 63: 271–290.
50. PedersenCB, GotzscheH, MollerJO, MortensenPB (2006) The Danish civil registration system. a cohort of eight million persons. Dan Med Bull 53: 441–449.
51. Rothman KJ, Greenland S, Lash TL (2008) Modern epidemiology. Philadelphia: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins.
Štítky
Interné lekárstvoČlánok vyšiel v časopise
PLOS Medicine
2014 Číslo 7
- Statiny indukovaná myopatie: Jak na diferenciální diagnostiku?
- MUDr. Dana Vondráčková: Hepatopatie sú pri liečbe metamizolom väčším strašiakom ako agranulocytóza
- Vztah mezi statiny a rizikem vzniku nádorových onemocnění − metaanalýza
- Nech brouka žít… Ať žije astma!
- Parazitičtí červi v terapii Crohnovy choroby a dalších zánětlivých autoimunitních onemocnění
Najčítanejšie v tomto čísle
- Association of Non-alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease with Chronic Kidney Disease: A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis
- Using Evidence to Combat Overdiagnosis and Overtreatment: Evaluating Treatments, Tests, and Disease Definitions in the Time of Too Much
- Association between Class III Obesity (BMI of 40–59 kg/m) and Mortality: A Pooled Analysis of 20 Prospective Studies
- Blue Marble Health: A Call for Papers