2020
DOI: 10.1080/00981389.2020.1823547
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Adverse childhood experiences and mental and physical health disparities: the moderating effect of race and implications for social work

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Cited by 30 publications
(28 citation statements)
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“…This study represented the first scoping review of the demographic backgrounds of participants in psychotherapy research conducted with clients with physical health conditions. This study focused only on psychotherapy research with clients with cancer, obesity, and diabetes in particular, given (a) the prevalence of cancer, obesity, and diabetes in the United States (National Health Council, 2014), (b) the extent of disparities in these conditions for various marginalized groups (Hoy-Ellis & Fredriksen-Goldsen, 2016; LaBrenz et al, 2020), and (c) the documented underrepresentation of marginalized groups in research on these conditions (Chen et al, 2014; Chow et al, 2012). As such, the focus of this review—on demographic reporting in psychotherapy studies with clients with cancer, obesity, and diabetes—investigated three of the most common physical health conditions that comprise some of the largest health disparities.…”
Section: The Present Studymentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…This study represented the first scoping review of the demographic backgrounds of participants in psychotherapy research conducted with clients with physical health conditions. This study focused only on psychotherapy research with clients with cancer, obesity, and diabetes in particular, given (a) the prevalence of cancer, obesity, and diabetes in the United States (National Health Council, 2014), (b) the extent of disparities in these conditions for various marginalized groups (Hoy-Ellis & Fredriksen-Goldsen, 2016; LaBrenz et al, 2020), and (c) the documented underrepresentation of marginalized groups in research on these conditions (Chen et al, 2014; Chow et al, 2012). As such, the focus of this review—on demographic reporting in psychotherapy studies with clients with cancer, obesity, and diabetes—investigated three of the most common physical health conditions that comprise some of the largest health disparities.…”
Section: The Present Studymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Similar disparities in participation have been found for diabetes research (Chow et al, 2012). Gaining a better understanding of external validity of psychotherapies for clients with cancer, obesity, and diabetes is a social justice issue, as these conditions disproportionately impact historically marginalized populations (Hoy-Ellis & Fredriksen-Goldsen, 2016; LaBrenz et al, 2020). Delineating which populations are included in intervention research will provide a better understanding of for whom interventions are effective, with a critical focus on ensuring that interventions are effective for individuals from backgrounds that are underrepresented in health psychotherapy research and often overrepresented in prevalence rates of health conditions.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Finally, findings related to cultural considerations in this study are key, given the disproportionate distribution of ACEs among communities of color and calls for culturally responsive approaches to all ACEs research, assessment, and intervention and prevention (Bernard et al, 2020; LaBrenz et al, 2020; Liu et al, 2019). Providers interviewed in this study spoke to key lessons learned for working with diverse, complex patient populations, including the importance of having multidisciplinary, multicultural, multilingual team members, and the importance of being family centered in approach.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 93%
“…Lastly, it is important to highlight that in this study, ACEs were collected as one piece of a comprehensive evaluation that also assessed for family and child context and strengths. Although a focus on this did not emerge in our results, research has demonstrated how positive childhood experiences and natural supports are associated with better health, even in the context of ACEs exposure, leading scholars to suggest that best practices for ACEs inquiry should jointly include assessment of protective factors, including within-child characteristics and contextual factors such as family and community characteristics (Bethell et al, 2019;Liu et al, 2019) Finally, findings related to cultural considerations in this study are key, given the disproportionate distribution of ACEs among communities of color and calls for culturally responsive approaches to all ACEs research, assessment, and intervention and prevention (Bernard et al, 2020;LaBrenz et al, 2020;Liu et al, 2019). Providers interviewed in this study spoke to key lessons learned for working with diverse, complex patient populations, including the importance of having multidisciplinary, multicultural, multilingual team members, and the importance of being family centered in approach.…”
Section: Considerations and Recommendationsmentioning
confidence: 93%
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