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Contact with health services for adverse childhood experiences and subsequent risk of non-affective psychotic disorder: population-based evidence from Ontario, Canada

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Objective — We sought to estimate the association between indicators of health service contact for adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) and the risk of psychotic disorders using population-based health administrative data.

Methods — We accessed the Ontario-MINDS cohort, constructed using population-based health administrative data. The cohort included children born between 1992 and 1996, linked to maternal health records, and followed to age 27–31 years to identify incident non-affective psychotic disorder (NAPD) using a validated algorithm. We conducted a scoping review to identify codes indicative of ACE-related health service contacts prior to age 12 years, including indicators of abuse, neglect, and household dysfunction. Multivariable modified Poisson regression models were estimated to obtain incidence rate ratios (IRR) and 95 % confidence intervals (CI).

Results — In our analytic sample (n = 559,073), 27.1 % had a health service contact for one or more ACEs. The risk of NAPD was 51 % higher for those with a contact for household dysfunction (IRR = 1.51;95%CI = 1.45,1.58), 78 % higher for those with a contact for abuse/neglect (IRR = 1.78;95%CI = 1.58,2.01), and nearly three-fold higher among those who had health service contacts for both household dysfunction and abuse/neglect (IRR = 2.61;95%CI = 2.38,2.85). We also found a gradient effect, and people with health service contacts for 4+ ACE subtypes had a substantially elevated risk of NAPD (IRR = 4.04; 95%CI = 3.26,5.01), relative to those with no ACE-related contacts.

Conclusions — Our findings add population-based evidence to the growing body of literature showing the detrimental effects of ACEs on serious mental disorders, and highlight the utility of administrative databases for advancing research in this field.

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Citation

Salama R, Rodrigues R, Comeau J, Choi YH, Rotenberg M, Edwards J, Le B, Anderson KK. Schizophr Res. 2025; 283:115-121. Epub 2025 Jul 16.

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