Association of the World War II finnish evacuation of children with psychiatric hospitalization in the next generation

IMPORTANCE

Although there is evidence that adverse childhood experiences are associated with worse mental health in adulthood, scarce evidence is available regarding an emerging concern that the next generation might also be affected.

 

OBJECTIVE

To compare the risk of psychiatric hospitalization in cousins whose parents were vs were not exposed to the Finnish evacuation policy that involved a mean 2-year stay with a Swedish foster family.

 

DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS

This multigenerational, population-based cohort study of Finnish individuals and their siblings born between January 1, 1933, and December 31, 1944, analyzed the association of evacuee status  as a child duringWorldWar II in the first generation with the risk of psychiatric hospitalization among offspring in the second generation. Evacuee status duringWorldWar II was determined using the Finnish National Archive’s registry of participants in the Finnish evacuation. Data on evacuee status were linked to the psychiatric diagnoses in the Finnish Hospital Discharge Register from January 1, 1971, through December 31, 2012, for offspring (n = 93 391) born between January 1, 1950, and December 31, 2010. Sex-specific Cox proportional hazards regression models were used to estimate hazard ratios for risk of psychiatric hospitalization during the follow-up period. Because offspring of evacuees and their nonevacuated siblings are cousins, the Cox proportional hazards regression models included fixed effects to adjust for confounding factors in families. Data analysis was performed from June 15, 2016, to August 26, 2017.

 

EXPOSURES

Parental participation in the evacuation duringWorldWar II (coded 1 for parents who were evacuated and placed in foster care and 0 for those not evacuated).

 

MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES

Offspring’s initial admission to the hospital for a psychiatric disorder, obtained from the Finnish Hospital Discharge Register from January 1, 1971, through December 31, 2012.

 

RESULTS

Of the 93 391 study persons, 45 955 (49.2%) were women and 47 436 (50.8) were men; mean (SD) age in 2012 among survivors was 45.4 (6.58) years. Female offspring of mothers evacuated to  Sweden during childhood had an elevated risk of psychiatric hospitalization (hazard ratio for any type of psychiatric disorder: 2.04 [95%CI, 1.04-4.01]; hazard ratio for mood disorder: 4.68 [95%CI, 1.92-11.42]). There was no excess risk of being hospitalized for a psychiatric disorder among women whose fathers were exposed to the Finnish evacuation policy duringWorldWar II or among men whose mothers or fathers were exposed.

 

CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE

In a prior follow-up study of the Finnish evacuees, girls evacuated to Swedish foster families duringWorldWar II were more likely to be hospitalized for a psychiatric disorder—in particular, a mood  disorder—in adulthood than their nonevacuated sisters. The present study found that the offspring of these individuals were also at risk for mental health problems that required hospitalization and  suggests that early-life adversities, including war-related exposures, may be associated with mental health disorders that persist across generations.

 



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Reference: 
Torsten Santavirta, PhD, Nina Santavirta, PhD, Stephen E. Gilman, ScD | 2018
In: JAMA Psychiatry, eISSN 2168-622X | 75 | 1 | January | 21-27
http://doi.org/10.1001/jamapsychiatry.2017.3511