Elevating the Narrative About Adverse Events During Development

US middle- or high-school –age children are taught about the perils of cyber bullying in health classes. They learn that they are at risk of suicide because of online harassment behaviors and that resources are being expanded to prevent, report, or interrupt such bullying. However, the perspective that suicide victims like ly have other salient predisposing or precipitating risk factors (eg, summarized comprehensively by Turecki and Brent1) is usually not emphasized simultaneously. In the context of an abundance of studies documenting clear associations between childhood or adolescence adverse experiences and many asp ects of health, as reviewed recently in the Lancet Public Health,2 it is not an exaggeration to observe that a crucial axiom of first science classes, correlation is not causation, can be overlooked when adverse events emerge narratively as the major etiologic cause of much of psychopathology, inclu ding youth suicide. However, traumatic events, such as youth sexual victimization3 or physical punishment/maltreatment,4 have long been known to correlate to social contexts and/or heritable genotypes, which also might mediate or co-mediate the risk for adverse outcomes. That some methodologic desig ns are superior to others to disentangle such confounds and examine causation is well known in behavior genetics.5 This was highlighted 2 decades ago, in this very journal, by Dr. Naimah Weinberg of the National Institutes of Health, in an article reviewing the cogniti...
Source: Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry - Category: Psychiatry Authors: Tags: Editorial Source Type: research