Department of Psychiatry and Behavioural Sciences, University of Manchester, Manchester Royal Infirmary, Manchester
ARC Epidemiology Unit, University of Manchester, Manchester
Unit of Chronic Disease Epidemiology, University of Manchester, Manchester
ARC Epidemiology Unit, University of Manchester, Manchester
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioural Sciences, University of Manchester, Manchester Royal Infirmary, Manchester, UK
Correspondence: Dr N. Kapur, Department of Psychiatry, Williamson Building, University of Manchester, Oxford Road, Manchester M13 9PL, UK. Tel: 0161 275 0733; fax: 0161 275 0716; e-mail: nav.kapur{at}man.ac.uk
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ABSTRACT |
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Aims To examine the hypotheses that individuals frequently attending primary care report childhood adversities and illness exposures more commonly than the remainder of patients and that any association is independent of adult psychiatric disorder.
Method A nested case-control study was carried out in a single general practice in Manchester, UK. Fifty frequent attenders (randomly selected from adult patients in the top decile of consultation frequency) and fifty normal attenders (randomly selected from the remainder of adult patients) underwent a structured psychiatric interview and a detailed, semi-structured interview of childhood experience.
Results There was a strong association between frequent attendance and childhood experiences. Multivariate analysis suggested that reported childhood illness exposures and reports of childhood adversity were each associated independently with adult consultation behaviour, even after adjustment for adult psychiatric disorder.
Conclusions Interventions for high users of health care may need to address childhood experiences of illness and childhood adversities, as well as adult psychiatric disorder.
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INTRODUCTION |
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METHOD |
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Participants
The participants in this study were recruited from a cohort of 1328 adults
aged 18-65 years who were selected from the general practice register by
simple random sampling. The follow-up rate for this cohort was 90%
(Macfarlane et al,
2000).
Consultation data were obtained from primary-care case records for a 5-year period (1995-1999). In the UK each individual has a set of primary-care case notes. These record medical care contacts and interventions and follow the patients even if they change general practices. We defined a consultation as an entry in the notes reporting face-to-face contact between a patient and a general practitioner, including surgery consultations and home visits (Heywood et al, 1998). This study was concerned with attendance at primary care only, although we did record the number of referrals to secondary care.
Patients who were in the top decile of consultation frequency were designated frequent attenders. All others were designated normal attenders. We decided to adopt a distributional approach to defining frequent attendance rather than selecting an arbitrary cut-off for the number of attendances. This was because baseline consultation rates (and hence cut-offs for frequent attendance) vary greatly between settings, but similar proportions of patients account for a similar proportion of work-loads across settings (Neal et al, 1998). In addition, this definition of frequent attenders has been used in a number of previous studies (Gill & Sharpe, 1999).
We selected a random sample of frequent attenders and a random sample of control participants from the normal attending group. We did not match participants with respect to age and gender. This was to ensure that as far as possible the frequent and normal attenders were representative of the base populations from which they were drawn, and to allow us to examine the influence of factors such as age and gender.
Sample size
No previous study has examined directly the association between childhood
exposures and frequent attendance. The prevalence of childhood adversity in
patients who consult with unexplained symptoms in primary care is in the
region of 25% and the prevalence of childhood adversity in primary-care
attenders generally is less than 5% (Craig
et al, 1993). Assuming a type 1 error of 5% (i.e.
=0.05), 80% power (i.e. 1-ß=0.2) and a 1:1 case: control ratio, we
calculated that we would need to recruit 50 frequent attenders and 50 control
participants to be able to detect this difference.
Recruitment procedure
Samples of frequent attenders and normal attenders were selected randomly
in blocks of ten individuals by an independent statistician. They were sent a
letter from their general practitioner and then contacted by a member of the
research team to arrange a time for interview. Interviews took place in the
participants' own homes. A psychiatrically trained researcher (N.K.) carried
out all interviews and was blind to consultation status. Recruitment continued
until there were 50 participants in each group. Written informed consent was
obtained for all participants prior to the start of the interview. The study
received ethical approval from the local research ethics committee.
Measures
The first part of the interview recorded socio-demographic data and recent
symptoms. Named chronic physical illnesses of greater than 12 months' duration
were recorded according to ICD-10 criteria
(World Health Organization,
1992) and were rated as present if they were also confirmed in the
case notes. The computerised version 2.1 of the Schedules for Clinical
Assessment in Neuropsychiatry (SCAN; World
Health Organization, 2000) was used to establish the presence or
absence of psychiatric disorder in adulthood.
The Childhood Experience of Care and Abuse (CECA) interview was used as a measure of childhood experience up to the age of 17 years (Bifulco et al, 1994). It is an investigator-based retrospective interview. Studies of sibling pairs have demonstrated the reliability and validity of the CECA interview and it has been used in a wide variety of community and clinical samples, including patients in primary care. It includes a number of sub-scales. The parental indifference scale is concerned with the amount of neglect or disinterest in the child's material and emotional care on the part of the parents. It has specific items on whether the child was fed and clothed properly and parental interest in everyday activities, school work and friendships. The antipathy scale measures the degree of dislike, criticism, hostility or coldness shown to the child by each parent. It includes items relating favouritism and scapegoating in comparison with other siblings. The physical abuse scale identifies instances of violence by a household member towards the child, and distinguishes between the child being beaten, kicked, burnt, hit with implements or threatened with knives or other weapons. The sexual abuse scale deals with sexual contact before the age of 17 years (other than willing sexual contact in teenage years between non-related peers). It includes episodes of sexualised physical contact, touching of breasts or genitals, oral sex and sexual intercourse. The psychological abuse scale refers to instances when the subject was tormented by adults in the household by cruel and sadistic means in order to enforce submission.
All interviews were audiotaped. Before any final ratings were made the material was presented at consensus meetings with other trained interviewers who regularly used the CECA interview. They rated each relevant category of adversity according to predefined thresholds and were blind to the participants' consultation rate and mental state. All items were scored on a four-point scale reflecting the severity, frequency and context of the adverse exposure. Only if the exposure was rated on the top two points of the scale (marked or moderate) was it rated as being present.
For the purposes of this study, the interviewer also enquired about confiding relationships in childhood, defined as a person or persons the child could talk to on a regular basis about concerns or problems. The respondent was asked about childhood experiences of illness in the subject themselves or other family members. Specific items recorded details of death or serious illness in siblings, death or serious physical or psychiatric illness in parents and serious illnesses and hospitalisations in the participants themselves. Illness exposures were only rated as present if they were prolonged (>3 months off work or school), potentially life-threatening or resulted in hospitalisations of over 3 weeks' duration (Hotopf et al, 1999).
Statistical analysis
All analyses were carried out using SPSS version 10.1
(SPSS, 2000). Univariate
statistics were used to examine the association between socio-demographic
factors and consultation status in adulthood and childhood exposures and
consultation status in adulthood. A logistic regression analysis was then
carried out to identify the childhood variables that were the best independent
predictors of consultation status in adulthood, after adjusting for the
presence of adult psychiatric disorder. Consultation status (frequent
attender: yes/no) was the dependent variable. We entered adult psychiatric
disorder into the model at the first step. Factors associated with
consultation status in the univariate analysis (P <0.01) were
entered into the model using a forward stepwise method.
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RESULTS |
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Overall, 62/100 participants (62%) were female and the median age (interquartile range) was 53.5 years (42-62); 74 were married, 98 were White British and two were South Asian. Thirty-six participants had a history of psychiatric disorder and nine had a history of alcohol misuse. A total of 26 participants had a history of chronic physical disorder in adulthood and 27 reported a serious illness during childhood.
Frequent attenders were defined as those in the top decile of consultation frequency over the whole study period. This gave a cut-off point of 35 consultations at primary care over 5 years or approximately seven consultations per year. Regarding the patterns of consultation, 24/50 (48%) frequent attenders consulted frequently in each time period throughout the study (1995-1999). Forty-two frequent attenders (84%) consulted frequently during the majority of the study period.
Association between socio-demographic and clinical variables and consultation status in adulthood
As expected, frequent attenders had a higher annual consultation rate at
primary care (median consultation rate (interquartile range): 9.2 (6.7-11.4)
v. 2.7 (0.8-5.0), P <0.001, Mann-Whitney U
test). They also had a higher annual referral rate to specialist out-patient
clinics (median referral rate (interquartile range): 0.8 (0-1.5) v. 0
(0-0.75), P=0.002, Mann-Whitney U test). Frequent attenders
were slightly older than the normal attenders, but this difference did not
reach statistical significance in our sample (median age (interquartile
range): 57.0 (48-63) v. 50.0 (41-60), P=0.1, Mann-Whitney
U test). The frequent attenders were more likely to be female (76%
v. 48%, P=0.007, 2 test) and to have a
history of psychiatric disorder as diagnosed by structured interview (58%
v. 14%, P <0.001,
2 test). Mood disorder
was the most common ICD-10 diagnosis among the frequent attenders (44%),
followed by somatoform disorder (16%) and panic disorder (14%). A similar
proportion of frequent attenders and normal attenders suffered from a chronic
physical illness (28% v. 24%, P=0.82,
2
test). The marital and employment status of the two groups were also
similar.
Association between childhood exposures and consultation status in adulthood
Table 1 shows the prevalence
of childhood illnesses and childhood adversities in frequent attenders and
normal attenders. Frequent attenders reported higher rates of serious illness
in themselves or their siblings. There was also an association between
frequent attendance and maternal physical illness and paternal psychiatric
illness. Frequent attenders reported higher rates of parental antipathy,
indifference, neglect and abuse in childhood. They were also less likely to
have had a confidant in childhood. There were no significant differences with
respect to parental death, parental separation and social class in
childhood.
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Logistic regression model of consultation rates
In order to determine which childhood exposures were independently
associated with adult consultation behaviour after adjusting for adult
psychiatric disorder, we carried out a logistic regression analysis. We
entered adult psychiatric disorder into the model at the first step. Factors
associated with consultation status in the univariate analysis (P
<0.01) were then entered into the model using a forward stepwise method.
The final model is shown in Table
2 and demonstrates that abusive experiences in childhood,
childhood neglect and childhood experience of illness (in the subjects
themselves or their close family) were independently associated with frequent
attendance in adulthood, even after adjusting for adult psychiatric disorder.
The final model was able to classify correctly almost 90% of frequent
attenders and normal attenders.
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DISCUSSION |
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This is the first study, to our knowledge, to examine the effects of experience of both childhood illness and adversity on adult consultation behaviour. The results are consistent with previous studies suggesting that childhood adversity is associated with increased health care use (Walker et al, 1999; Newman et al, 2000) and prospective work that has found childhood experience of illness to be associated with adult illness behaviour (Hotopf et al, 1999). Independent effects of childhood illness exposures and adversity on adult outcomes have been proposed once before and they were both associated with somatic presentation of psychiatric disorder in primary care (Craig et al, 1993).
Methodological issues
The current study has a number of methodological strengths. We recruited a
population-based sample of men and women and achieved a high response rate.
Our sample was derived from a large database (the practice register) and the
study was performed in a health care system that reliably captures virtually
all medical help-seeking in primary care. We used detailed standardised
interviews rather than self-report instruments to measure childhood experience
and adult psychiatric disorder. In addition, we measured both reported early
adversities and illness exposures, allowing a preliminary investigation of the
relative contribution of each. However, the findings of the current study need
to be interpreted in the context of its methodological shortcomings.
The retrospective method does not allow definitive statements to be made regarding causality and it could be argued that the observed associations are due to recall bias. Patients who are in frequent contact with health care professionals may be simply more likely or willing to recall illness exposures or adversities in childhood. However, not all childhood variables were recalled more frequently by frequent attenders. In addition, the evidence from adults with a known history of abuse (Williams, 1994) and from sibling pairs (Bifulco et al, 1997) suggests that reports of childhood experience are valid and reliable. Further-more, the CECA interview is designed to minimise recall bias as far as possible. It is a face-to-face interview measure and interviews were carried out in the respondents' own homes. The CECA assesses exposures in the context of the whole childhood situation. It involves detailed enquiry and seeks objective behavioural evidence before a positive rating can be made. It is investigator-rated rather than self-rated and interviewer bias is reduced by consensus rating meetings. Finally, the thresholds for a positive rating are relatively high. Individuals who experienced significant adversity as children are unlikely to forget such experiences but of course they might still be reluctant to disclose them to a researcher.
The study was relatively small. Although the magnitude of the associations between childhood variables and adult outcome was highly significant, the comparatively small sample size led to wide confidence intervals. In addition, the study was carried out in a single suburban general practice in the British National Health Service. Although the age and gender structure of our sample was similar to that of the local population, our findings may have limited generalisability. However, our results are consistent with studies carried out in very different health care settings (Walker et al, 1999; Newman et al, 2000). Further studies recruiting larger samples of subjects would overcome some of these difficulties.
An ideal study design might have involved different interviewers carrying out separate assessments of psychiatric disorder and childhood experience in order to avoid contamination and to minimise rater bias. However, we believe that the bias resulting from a single interviewer is likely to be minimal. The SCAN was carried out first, followed by the CECA interview. This allowed the interviewer to build up a rapport with the participant before asking detailed questions about childhood. Final ratings of the CECA were made at consensus meetings by raters blind to the participants' mental state.
Although we considered chronic physical illness, we did not include a standardised measure of severity of physical disorder. It is possible that this might have made an additional contribution to the model. However, when we carried out a post hoc analysis using a measure of how disabling individuals found their symptoms (Barnes & Benjamin, 1987), the final model (Table 2) did not change.
It is important that statistical models do not include more variables than is justified by the number of individuals because this renders estimates of regression coefficients unreliable (Bagley et al, 2001). Simulation experiments suggest that the number of events divided by the number of predictor variables should be at least ten, and on this basis it is possible to suggest that the current study is underpowered. However, it is important that models include all relevant variables, and the magnitude of the association between predictor variables and outcome in the current study suggests that our overall model will not be affected unduly by imprecise estimates of the regression coefficients. In any case, if we adopt a more parsimonious model and enter only the five variables most strongly associated with consultation status, our findings are essentially the same, with childhood adversities (abusive experiences) and illness exposures (childhood illness, paternal psychiatric illness) each independently associated with consultation behaviour. A related point concerns the fact that exposure variables are likely to be correlated in this study. This might mean that estimates of their contributions to the model (as measured by their regression coefficients) are imprecise. The variance associated with the regression coefficients will be increased, with a consequent loss of statistical significance - a type II error (Bagley et al, 2001). The magnitude of the associations (and related P values) in the current study would suggest that this is not seriously affecting our findings.
This study was not designed to examine interactions between variables, or the specificity of outcome and exposure. For example, we found that physical abuse but not sexual or psychological abuse was significantly associated with consultation status in the univariate analysis. This was probably due to small numbers rather than a specific effect of physical abuse, but such issues need to be examined with larger samples in future studies.
Interpretation of findings
How might childhood experience of illness influence later consulting
behaviour? It may act by increasing the likelihood of chronic physical illness
in adulthood, but we did not find this in our sample. It could reflect the
association between physical symptoms in childhood and adult psychiatric
disorder (which we know increases consultation)
(Hotopf et al, 1999).
High utilisation may be a learned behaviour picked up as a result of exposure
to the illness and to the illness behaviour of other family members (parents
or siblings in the current study). Craig et al
(1993) suggested that somatic
symptoms in childhood lessened the distress associated with neglect, and so
established a repertoire that involved somatic rather than emotional means of
attracting care. This pattern of response persisted into adulthood.
How might childhood adversity influence later consultation behaviour? It may act through increasing the rate of psychiatric disorder, physical disease or health risk behaviours (Walker et al, 1999). Taylor and colleagues (Taylor et al, 2000) proposed a model in which aberrant early care leads to abnormal attachment styles in parental relationships that persist into adulthood and encourage medical help-seeking. Another possibility is that individuals with a history of childhood adversity interpret their symptoms in a more negative manner (Scarinci et al, 1994).
Implications for practice and research
This study suggests that frequent attenders to primary care have high rates
of exposure to illness and adversity as children; they also have higher rates
of psychiatric disorder. Thus interventions for high users of health care may
need to address both of these needs. Some studies suggest that written
disclosure of emotionally important events (including events in childhood)
reduces consultation rates (Pennebaker,
1997). Rigorous treatment of mood disorder in primary care may
actually increase consultation in the short term
(Simon et al, 2001),
although the longer-term effects are unclear. Promising alternative
therapeutic approaches might include cognitive-behavioural therapy, symptom
reattribution (Morriss et al,
1998) and psychodynamic interpersonal therapy
(Guthrie et al,
1999).
Future research in this area is limited by the accurate measurement of childhood exposures. The gold standard investigation might be regarded as the prospective study with contemporaneous recording of childhood exposures. Although a truly prospective study may not be feasible or ethically justifiable, retrospective cohort studies (Hotopf et al, 1999) could help to clarify whether childhood experiences of illness and adversity influence health care use in later life. However, such designs are not without their problems. There may well be a bias due to non-disclosure of distressing childhood events at the time when they are occurring. It could be more productive to investigate possible mechanisms for the association between childhood exposures and adult illness behaviour. Studies might include measures of possible pathway variables, such as adult attachment, illness cognitions and somatic symptoms.
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Clinical Implications and Limitations |
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LIMITATIONS
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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Received for publication June 19, 2003. Revision received March 5, 2004. Accepted for publication March 6, 2004.
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