A new pair of studies from a Duke research team’s long-term work in New Zealand make the case that mental health struggles in early life can lead to poorer physical health and advanced aging in adulthood.
But because mental health
problems peak early in life and can be identified, the researchers say that
more investment in prompt mental health care could be used to prevent later
diseases and lower societal healthcare costs.
“The same people who
experience psychiatric conditions when they are young go on to experience
excess age-related physical diseases and neurodegenerative diseases when they
are older adults,” explained Terrie Moffitt, the Nannerl O. Keohane professor
of psychology and neuroscience at Duke, who is the senior author on both
studies.
The findings in a paper
appearing Feb. 17 in JAMA Psychiatry come from the
long-term Dunedin Study, which has tested and monitored the health and
wellbeing of a thousand New Zealanders born in 1972 and ’73 from their birth to
past age 45.
In middle age, the study
participants who had a history of youthful psychopathology were aging at a
faster pace, had declines in sensory, motor and cognitive functions, and were
rated as looking older than their peers. This pattern held even after the data
were controlled for health factors such as overweight, smoking, medications and
prior physical disease. Their young mental health issues included mainly
anxiety, depression, and substance abuse, but also schizophrenia.
“You can identify the people
at risk for physical illnesses much earlier in life,” said Jasmin Wertz, a
postdoctoral researcher at Duke who led the study. “If you can improve their
mental health in childhood and adolescence, it’s possible that you might
intervene to improve their later physical health and aging.”
A related study by the same
team that appeared in JAMA Network Open in January
used a different approach and looked at 30 years of hospital records for 2.3
million New Zealanders aged 10 to 60 from 1988 to 2018. It also found a strong
connection between early-life mental health diagnoses and later-life medical
and neurological illnesses.
That analysis, led by former
Duke postdoctoral researcher Leah Richmond-Rakerd, showed that young
individuals with mental disorders were more likely to develop subsequent physical
diseases and to die earlier than people without mental disorders. People with
mental illnesses experienced more hospitalizations for physical conditions,
spent more time in hospitals and accumulated more healthcare costs over the
subsequent 30 years.
“Our healthcare system often
divides treatment between the brain and the body, but integrating the two could
benefit population health,” said Richmond-Rakerd, who is now an assistant
professor of psychology at the University of Michigan.
“Investing more resources in
treating young people’s mental-health problems is a window of opportunity to
prevent future physical diseases in older adults,” Moffitt said. “Young people
with mental health problems go on to become very costly medical patients in
later life.”
In a 2019 commentary for JAMA
Psychiatry, Moffitt and her research partner Avshalom Caspi, the
Edward M. Arnett professor of psychology and neuroscience at Duke, made the
argument that mental health providers have an opportunity to forestall later
health problems and other social costs by intervening in the lives of younger
people. Their body of work is showing that mental disorders can be reliably
predicted from childhood risk factors such as poverty, maltreatment, low IQ,
poor self-control and family mental health issues. And because populations in
the developed world are becoming more dominated by older people, the time to
make those investments in prevention is now, they said.
Source: https://www.duke.edu/
Journal article: https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamapsychiatry/fullarticle/2776612
https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamanetworkopen/fullarticle/2774902
Source: Kids
With Mental Health Problems Become Less Healthy Adults – Scents of Science (myfusimotors.com)
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