TY - JOUR
T1 - A family study of adult twins with and without a history of childhood abuse
T2 - Stability of retrospective reports of maltreatment and associated family measures
AU - Nelson, Elliot C.
AU - Lynskey, Michael T.
AU - Heath, Andrew C.
AU - Martin, Nicholas G.
N1 - Funding Information:
Funding for this project was provided by a National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA) grant AA013446. Additional support was provided by NIAAA grants AA017688, AA011998, and AA007728 (PI Dr. Heath), and National Institute on Drug Abuse grant DA012854 (PI Dr. Madden). We would like to thank the Australia Twin Registry’s twin and family member participants for their continuing support of ongoing research projects.
PY - 2010/4
Y1 - 2010/4
N2 - Childhood sexual abuse (CSA) and physical abuse (CPA) are well-established risk-factors for a wide of range of proximal and distal outcomes. The lack of availability of an optimal design for examining abuse and its consequences has resulted in the use of various approaches, each having its own limitations. We describe the Childhood Trauma Study, which ascertained families from a large young adult Australian twin cohort on the basis of twins' responses to screening questions assessing CSA and CPA. We report data from 3407 participants including twins, non-twin siblings, and their parents. Our data demonstrate the feasibility of using a comprehensive assessment to evaluate retrospective history of childhood abuse in an adult sample. We observed that risk for each form of abuse increased incrementally with the number of parents with alcohol problems. Psychometric properties of our measures of CSA and CPA including reasonable longterm stability, construct validity, and evidence of familial corroboration compare favorably with those of other reports in which samples were considerably younger and assessments were repeated over shorter intervals.
AB - Childhood sexual abuse (CSA) and physical abuse (CPA) are well-established risk-factors for a wide of range of proximal and distal outcomes. The lack of availability of an optimal design for examining abuse and its consequences has resulted in the use of various approaches, each having its own limitations. We describe the Childhood Trauma Study, which ascertained families from a large young adult Australian twin cohort on the basis of twins' responses to screening questions assessing CSA and CPA. We report data from 3407 participants including twins, non-twin siblings, and their parents. Our data demonstrate the feasibility of using a comprehensive assessment to evaluate retrospective history of childhood abuse in an adult sample. We observed that risk for each form of abuse increased incrementally with the number of parents with alcohol problems. Psychometric properties of our measures of CSA and CPA including reasonable longterm stability, construct validity, and evidence of familial corroboration compare favorably with those of other reports in which samples were considerably younger and assessments were repeated over shorter intervals.
KW - Childhood sexual abuse
KW - Parental alcoholism
KW - Physical abuse
KW - Reliability
KW - Retrospective recall
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=77953744568&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1375/twin.13.2.121
DO - 10.1375/twin.13.2.121
M3 - Article
C2 - 20397742
AN - SCOPUS:77953744568
SN - 1832-4274
VL - 13
SP - 121
EP - 130
JO - Twin Research and Human Genetics
JF - Twin Research and Human Genetics
IS - 2
ER -