Research Article

Adverse childhood experiences, adult anxiety and social capital among women in rural Kenya

Authors

Michael L. Goodman, Larissa Baker, Agnes Karambu Maigallo, Aleisha Elliott, Philip Keiser, and Lauren Raimer-Goodman

Citation

Goodman ML, Baker L, Maigallo AK, Elliott A, Keiser P, Raimer-Goodman L. Adverse childhood experiences, adult anxiety and social capital among women in rural Kenya. J Anxiety Disord. 2022 Oct;91:102614. doi: 10.1016/j.janxdis.2022.102614. Epub 2022 Aug 5. PMID: 35988441.

Publication Date

October 2022

Publication Year

2022

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Abstract

Hundreds of millions of people suffer anxiety disorders globally, demonstrating need for scalable and effective interventions. Adverse childhood experiences contribute to this mental health burden. The stress-buffering hypothesis, which posits social factors moderate prior adversity and subsequent mental health outcomes, provides one theoretical avenue to consider observations that group-based microfinance programs improve social capital. We investigate associations between adverse childhood experiences, generalized anxiety among adults and social capital associated with participation in a group-based microfinance program in rural Kenya. Adult participants (n = 400 women) responded to standardized measures of childhood adversity in June 2018, group-affiliated social capital and generalized anxiety in June 2019. Cumulative adverse childhood experiences predicted higher anxiety, which was statistically moderated by the presence of group-affiliated interpersonal trust. This study is the first to find social capital associated with participation in a group-based microfinance program statistically moderates expected associations between adverse childhood experiences and adult generalized anxiety. Future study should be conducted using a cluster-randomized control design to further assess the potential of this intervention method to ameliorate associations between past adversity and current mental health.