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Home Exclusive Early Life Adversity and Childhood Maltreatment

Childhood adversity predicts combined physical and mental illness in later life

by Karina Petrova
April 21, 2026
Reading Time: 5 mins read
[Adobe Stock]

[Adobe Stock]

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Traumatic events during early life can cast a long shadow, substantially raising the risk that people will develop a combination of depression and chronic physical disease in their later years. By tracking thousands of older adults over time, researchers found that cumulative childhood adversity predicts a heavily increased burden of combined illnesses. The findings were recently published in the Journal of Affective Disorders.

Health professionals define childhood adversity through a broad spectrum of negative experiences occurring before adulthood. These events include direct harms, such as physical abuse, emotional neglect, or severe bullying. The definition also encompasses household dysfunction, meaning a child might grow up witnessing domestic violence, living with a severely depressed parent, or experiencing extreme poverty. Public health estimates suggest that massive numbers of people globally carry the weight of these early difficulties into adulthood.

Medical researchers are increasingly focused on a specific health outcome defined by the co-occurrence of multiple ailments. This term refers to a patient suffering from at least one mental health condition, usually depression, alongside at least one chronic physical ailment, such as diabetes or heart disease. Facing just one of these conditions is difficult, but battling both simultaneously creates an extremely heavy burden.

Patients managing simultaneous physical and psychological illnesses typically face worse medical outcomes and reduced quality of life compared to people fighting a single disease. They often encounter higher healthcare costs and a steeper risk of physical disability. Mental health struggles can make it incredibly difficult for a patient to take daily medications, exercise, or attend medical appointments, which allows physical diseases to rapidly worsen. At the same time, the physical pain and exhaustion of a chronic disease can easily deepen a patient’s depression.

Xing He, a population researcher at Peking University in Beijing, led the investigation alongside corresponding author Chao Guo. The research team noted that prior investigations largely focused on populations in high-income Western countries. These earlier assessments also tended to look at mental health and physical health in isolation rather than tracking how they develop together.

The researchers identified a need to observe these patterns within China, a country with a rapidly aging population. Adults in China who are currently in their later years experienced unique societal and economic circumstances during the middle of the twentieth century. These historical environments may have exposed this specific generation to exceptionally high levels of early adversity.

To investigate the relationship between early trauma and late-life illness, the researchers designed a prospective cohort study. In this type of research, scientists recruit a large group of people and observe them over a long period to see how their lives and health change. The study relied on data from the China Health and Retirement Longitudinal Study, a nationally representative survey project. The final analysis included just over four thousand participants aged forty-five and older.

The scientists tracked the health status of these participants through multiple survey waves conducted between 2011 and 2018. During a special interview in 2014, the participants answered detailed questions about their early years. They reported on twenty different indicators of trauma spanning abuse, neglect, and family dysfunction. The research team assigned each participant a score based on how many different categories of trauma they had experienced.

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The researchers divided the participants into three distinct exposure groups. One group reported absolute zero childhood adversity. A second group experienced low levels of adversity, meaning they endured between one and three types of traumatic events. The third group reported high exposure, meaning they had faced four or more different types of childhood trauma.

The scientists also tracked the participants’ health diagnoses. The participants reported whether a doctor had formally diagnosed them with major chronic physical conditions, including hypertension, stroke, cancer, liver disease, or arthritis. Researchers also evaluated the participants for depressive symptoms using a standardized mental health questionnaire. The defining outcome for the study was the simultaneous presence of both a chronic physical disease and clinical depression during any follow-up survey. The researchers excluded anyone who already displayed this combination of conditions at the beginning of the study.

Over the course of the tracking period, slightly more than forty percent of the participants developed combined physical and psychological conditions. A distinct mathematical pattern emerged from the data. The likelihood of developing these co-occurring illnesses rose sharply alongside the number of childhood traumas a person had experienced.

Participants with low exposure to early trauma faced a twenty percent higher risk of developing simultaneous conditions compared to those with completely trauma-free childhoods. For participants in the high exposure group, the health risks ballooned. These individuals faced a fifty-six percent higher likelihood of navigating both depression and chronic physical illness in their later years.

The researchers analyzed the developmental timeline of these illnesses to understand how they unfold. They found that childhood adversity frequently predicts the early onset of either depression or a single physical disease. Once an individual developed one of these initial health problems, they were deeply susceptible to crossing the threshold into combined illnesses. For people with high levels of early adversity, early-onset depression played a massive role in paving the way for later physical decline.

Traumatic experiences during formative years can fundamentally alter how the brain and body handle stress. Persistent exposure to hardship can keep the human nervous system in a constant state of high alert. This unrelenting stress response can elevate immune proteins tied to inflammation throughout the body. Over many decades, high levels of inflammation can quietly damage the cardiovascular system, disrupt metabolic functions, and wear down cellular defenses.

At the same time, childhood trauma can disrupt normal emotional development. This leaves people with fewer psychological resources to cope with the everyday challenges of adulthood. People dealing with the lingering effects of trauma might also turn to harmful coping mechanisms, such as smoking or heavy alcohol consumption, which are known to degrade physical health over time. By the time these individuals reach middle age, their bodily systems have endured decades of accelerated wear and tear.

The data also revealed differing impacts between the sexes. Women exposed to comparable levels of childhood trauma experienced a heightened risk for combined health conditions compared to men. The researchers suggested this disparity might originate from differences in biological sensitivity to stress, differing social coping mechanisms, and the heavy burden of gendered expectations. Both interpersonal traumas, like physical abuse, and non-interpersonal traumas, such as severe poverty, contributed substantially to the outcomes.

The researchers acknowledged limitations in their approach. The study design required participants to think back decades to recall childhood events. Human memory is often imperfect, and retrospective surveys always carry the risk of underreporting of painful memories. The researchers also narrowed their definition of mental health strictly to depressive symptoms. They did not incorporate measurements of anxiety or severe psychiatric disorders due to an absence of consistent data across all the different survey waves.

The team also relied on basic counts of physical diseases without applying statistical weights. This means they did not adjust their mathematical models to account for the varying severity of different physical ailments. A mild case of joint inflammation and a severely disabling stroke were counted the same way in the analysis. Finally, by excluding anyone who already suffered from combined conditions at the very beginning of the study, the research team might have inadvertently underestimated the true lifelong risk to the broader population.

The study highlights an intense need to integrate trauma screening into routine medical care for older adults. By identifying aging patients who survived difficult childhoods, medical providers might be able to offer tailored psychological support before an avalanche of physical illnesses takes root. Additional research will be needed to determine whether intensive therapy or community support programs can successfully break the chain between early trauma and late-life disease. Future investigations should also aim to include a wider spectrum of mental health disorders and incorporate disease weighting to better capture the realities of patient suffering.

The study, “The long-term impact of adverse childhood experiences on later-life physical and psychological multimorbidity: A prospective cohort study of middle-aged and older adults in China,” was authored by Xing He, Mingxing Wang, Yushan Du, Ziyi Ye, Ying Yang, and Chao Guo.

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