Title: Lifecourse and Chronic Disease
1Lifecourse and Chronic Disease Kathy Chapman, RN,
MN April, 26, 2012
2Overview
- Life Course Review
- Adverse Childhood Experience (ACE) Review
- ACEs as Health Risk
- Executive Function
- Application
3Life Course-Basic Principles
- Health at one stage affects health later
4Life Course-Basic Principles
- Health at one stage affects health later
- Trajectory
5Life Course-Basic Principles
- Health at one stage affects health later
- Trajectory
- Cumulative burden
6Life Course-Basic Principles
- Health at one stage affects health later
- Trajectory
- Cumulative Burden
- Sensitive or critical periods
7Critical Period
- Positive and Adverse events and exposures can
impact at any point in life - Impact is greatest at specific critical periods
such as - Pregnancy
- Childhood
- Adolescence
8Brain Development Critical Period
- In the first half pregnancy neurons are formed at
an astonishing rate 8,000 neurons per second - By birth all neurons are formed
9Brain Development in Childhood
- In early childhood, 700 synapses formed per
second - Pruning for efficiency
- what is used stays
10Exposure during Critical Period
- Adverse Child Events Study
11Pause
12Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs)
- CDC study partnering with Kaiser
- 17,000 patients middle class, employed, with
insurance - Access to client charts
- Asked questions about Early Childhood Experiences
13ACE Questions
- Respondents were asked about experiences in their
childhood - Abuse emotional, physical, sexual
- Neglect emotional, physical
- Household dysfunction
- Mother treated violently
- Household substance abuse, mental illness
- Parental separation or divorce
- Incarcerated Parent
14ACE Scores in this middle class cohort
- Zero 36
- One 26
- Two 16
- Three 9.5
- Four 12.5
15Poor Health Outcomesas the number of ACE
increase, the risk for the following health
problems increases in a strong and graded
fashion. -- CDC
- Alcoholism and alcohol abuse
- Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD)
- Depression
- Fetal death
- Health-related quality of life
- Illicit drug use
- Ischemic heart disease (IHD)
- Liver disease
- Risk for intimate partner violence
- Multiple sex partners
- Sexually transmitted diseases (STDs)
- Smoking
- Suicide attempts
- Unintended pregnancies
- Early initiation of smoking
- Early initiation of sexual activity
- Adolescent pregnancy
16Strong and Graded Fashion
- The higher the ACE Score the higher the risk for
health risk behaviors and for various chronic
diseases
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18Questions, Reflections
19Impact of ACE on Brain Development
- Toxic Stress can lead to changes in brain
structure and function. - One example Executive Function
20Executive Function
- Executive Functioning helps us translate
knowledge into action put into practice what we
know.
21Executive Function
- Helps us to function in 3 ways
- Inhibitory Control filtering thoughts and
impulses to resist temptation - Working memory hold and manipulate information
in our heads over a short period of time - Cognitive Flexibility Adjust to changing
demands, priorities and perspectives
22Executive Function
- Develops over many years
- 2 periods of rapid development
- Ages 3-5 years
- Ages 12-25 years
- Gives us the ability to keep plans in mind and
act accordingly - Developmental Plasticity responds to
environment
23Focus on policy and practice
- Executive Function
- Risk Assessment
24Public Health Problem
- Or Personal Coping mechanism?
25Executive Function Implications
- How might issues with Executive Function impact
interventions we use in chronic disease
management or risk factor mitigation? - Smoking Cessation
26ACEs as Health Risk
27ACEs as Health Risk
- We now know that a high Adverse Child Experience
score puts a person at high risk for later
physical and emotional illness. - It is time to shift our thinking ACE as Health
Risk - Screening questions
- Provider education
- Prevention and mitigation
28ACEs and the Prevention Framework
- Primary prevention is easier than mitigation
- Secondary Prevention
- Screening for ACEs and interventions to help
improve executive function - Integrated approach to intervening with children
with high ACE scores often treatment for
multiple family members. - Tertiary Prevention
- Treat disease/risk behavior and address exec
function issues (tobacco cessation)
29Questions, Reflections
30More information about ACE
- http//www.cdc.gov/ace/index.htm
- http//www.healthychild.ucla.edu/PUBLICATIONS/Docu
ments/ZerotoThree.pdf - http//developingchild.harvard.edu/
31Other Resources
- Jack P. Shonkoff, Lifelong Effects of Early
Childhood Adversity and Toxic Stress
http//pediatrics.aappublications.org/content/earl
y/2011/12/21/peds.2011-2663 - http//pediatrics.aappublications.org/content/124/
Supplement_3/S163.full
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