The Connection Between Childhood Abuse and Adult Depression
How Childhood Abuse Can Affect the Brain as a Adult
By A.J. Bell, published Mar 07, 2007
Published Content: 151 Total Views: 60,793 Favorited By: 20 CPs
Statistically speaking women are ten times more likely to experience childhood abuse than men. This means women are twice as likely to develop adult depression from being abused as a child. A child physically abused child has a 59% chance of experiencing depression later in life.
The recovery of depression in an adult requires investigation into the person's early life. Researchers know that traumatic experiences such as neglect or childhood abuse can result in changes in the chemistry and even structures of the brain. The stress response system is sensitized and those who are abused have elevated response to environmental pressures.
In a study, researchers compared 680 children who were abused and neglected before the age of 11 with 520 children of the same age, sex, and race. They followed both groups up to the age of 29. The group of abused children had a 75% higher risk of developing major depression as adults.
To undo the damage of abuse to the person mental health professionals must access it, explore it, and process the experience with the patient. Both depression and abuse tend to run together in families passed down from generation to generation. Many children that suffer abuse end up with an assortment of mental problems as they age ranging from learning difficulties, posttraumatic stress disorder, and intense anxiety.
Childhood abuse can cause chemical and physical changes in the brain.
Credit: www.freephotos.com
Copyright: www.freephotos.com
You may also like...
- Alcohol and Domestic Violence:The Connection
- What You Can Do to Stop Animal Cruelty and Domestic Violence
- Why the Best Parental Poems Always Seem to Be About Daddy
- Analyzing Child Abuse Cases and Articles
- Circumcision in the United States
- Ten Questions and Answers About BDSM
- The Immorality of Homosexual Sex
- "Survivors" of Sexual Abuse Can Lead Healthy and Fulfilling Lives Whereas "Victims" Are Often the Op...
- Studies: Smoking, Childhood Relationships Can Increase Clinical Depression
- Dreams: Real Meaning or Just Plain Wacky?
Takeaways
- A child that has been abused is far more likely to suffer from depression as one that did not.
- There is research to show chemical and physical changes in the brain as a result.
- Statistically speaking women are ten times more likely to experience childhood abuse than men.
Did You Know?
In a study, researchers compared 680 children who were abused and neglected before the age of 11 with 520 children of the same age, sex, and race. The group of abused children had a 75% higher risk of developing major depression as adults.
Most Commented On



Joy
Add a Comment
Posted on 03/24/2008 at 4:03:29 PM
Alyce Rocco
Add a Comment
Posted on 05/27/2007 at 10:05:00 PM