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Medical students' ACE scores mirror general population, study finds

 

national survey published in 2014 revealed a disturbing finding. Compared to college graduates pursuing other professions, medical students, residents and early career physicians experienced a higher degree of burnout.

Citing that article, a group of researchers at University of California at Davis School of Medicine wondered whether medical students’ childhood adversity and resilience played a role in their burnout, said Dr. Andres Sciolla, an associate professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at the University of California at Davis Medical School. Sciolla is the lead author of a recent study in the journal Academic Psychiatry that investigated those questions.

Their query was based on the landmark CDC-Kaiser Permanente Adverse Childhood Experiences Studythat showed a remarkable link between 10 types of childhood trauma — such as witnessing a mother being hit, living with a family member who is addicted to alcohol or who is mentally ill, living with a parent who is emotionally abusive, experiencing divorce — and the adult onset of chronic disease, mental illness, being violent or a victim of violence, among many other consequences. The study found that two-thirds of the more than 17,000 participants had an ACE score of at least one, and 12 percent had an ACE score of four or more. (For more information, see ACEs Science 101.)

The ACE Study and subsequent research shows that people with an ACE score of 4 are twice as likely to be smokers and seven times more likely to be alcoholic than someone with an ACE score of 0. Having an ACE score of 4 increases the risk of emphysema or chronic bronchitis by nearly 400 percent, and attempted suicide by 1200 percent. An ACE score of 6 or higher is associated with a 20-year shorter lifespan than someone with an ACE score of 0. However, subsequent research has shown that social buffers, such as having just one caring adult in a child’s life, can mitigate the impact of ACEs.

For the UC Davis study, 86 third-year medical students completed an ACE survey. Of those, 49% had an ACE score of 0, 40 % had ACE scores between 1-3, and 12 % had ACE scores of 4 or more.

“Contrary to our expectations, the prevalence of ACEs in a class of third-year medical students was comparable to rates in the general population,” wrote the authors.

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Dr. Andres Sciolla

“You can assume that because physicians, in general, and medical students, come from more affluent backgrounds than the general population that those medical students would have a lower prevalence of ACEs than the general population and that was not the case,” explained Sciolla.

Also significant, said Sciolla, is that all of the students who had ACE scores of 4 or more were women. “When we’re talking about interpersonal violence — physical abuse, sexual abuse, emotional abuse — women are more likely than men to be victims,” he said. “The medical workforce is becoming increasingly female. And we know that female physicians are at a high risk for suicide and burning out, we can speculate that female physicians may be at increased risk for negative health and professional outcomes, so it needs to be looked at further.”

And the study revealed that higher ACE scores had exacted a toll. Students were asked to gauge how much their experiences of adversity in childhood had affected their physical and mental health. Of those who reported an ACE score of 4 or higher, 100 % said that their mental health had been significantly or moderately impacted by their childhood trauma, compared with 26% of students with ACE scores of 3 or less.

“Those students who have high ACE scores are at a heightened risk for health problems, based on the literature of ACEs,” said Sciolla.

Students also answered questions that indicated they had adults in their lives who provided emotional support. They were asked to respond with answers such as “definitely true,” “probably true,” “not true,” to statements including: I believe that my father loved me when I was little; When I was a child, neighbors or my friends’ parents seemed to like me; When I felt really bad, I could almost always find someone I trusted to talk to.They answered 14 statements from a resilience questionnaire developed by psychologists Mark Rains and Kate McClinn. And, overall, the students’ resilience scores were high, with the median number of affirmative responses to the 14 questions was 13, according to the study.

A recent study in the Journal of Women’s Health, entitled “Adverse Childhood Experiences and Mental and Behavioral Health Conditions During Pregnancy: The Role of Resilience, suggests just how important resilience might be to mental health. The study of 355 prenatal women found, for example, that women with no ACEs but with low resilience have more depressive symptoms than those with high ACEs and high resilience, according to Dr. Carey Watson, one of the researchers and a physician in Obstetrics & Gynecology at Kaiser Medical Center in Antioch, Calif. (Read this ACEs Connection story here.)

Another motivation for asking medical students to take the ACEs and resilience surveys was to allow them to reflect on their own experiences as they participated in role play in class with an actor playing the part of a parent whose family is in the grip of trauma, said study co-author Dr. Michael Wilkes. Wilkes developed the curriculum for teaching third-year students about ACEs science in the Doctoring class.

drmichaelwilkes
Dr. Michael Wilkes

“They were going to be dealing with a ‘patient’ who had all kinds of childhood trauma and were suffering greatly from it. And the idea was could we ask the students to understand what ACEs were and how they affected somebody without having them going through [taking an ACE survey] themselves?” said Wilkes, a professor of medicine at UC Davis. 

While students had the option of opting out of taking part, had they done so, they would have missed out on an opportunity, according to Wilkes. “We felt it was an enormous advantage to help them understand and experience what this 10-item survey meant in terms of health and prior experiences,” he said. (Full disclosure: ACEs Connection founder and publisher, Jane Stevens, is acknowledged in the article for providing input on the case study used to teach students about interacting with a family experiencing trauma.)

When students came to class, they were provided with the results of the entire class’ ACE survey — anonymously — and were taught about the ACE Study. “They were shocked and talked about what this means, how it might impact their education and what they might do with this information as well,” said Wilkes. Before the class began, small group facilitators made sure that students were reminded that mental health support was available, should they want to seek help. The rest of the class activity went something like this, said  Wilkes:

The “patient” asks scripted questions about her own ACEs and her child’s ACEs, and the students brainstorm and enact responses to the questions.

“The job of the physician was to reassure her, understand her concerns, empathize with her and give her information and a referral for professional help,” said Sciolla.

 The overall experience hit home for many of the students, said Wilkes.

“Many told stories about siblings who had grown up in the same house but had suffered greatly,” recalled Wilkes. “It led into a big discussion about the concept of resilience. Our medical students, without sounding arrogant, our medical students are probably at the very top of resiliency. They made it into medical school despite all these obstacles and barriers,” he said.  “What is it about that? How can we understand that? Can we capitalize on that?”

However, the researchers pointed out, 12 percent of the medical students who took the ACE survey had ACE scores of 4 or more. “In the absence of data to the contrary, these findings suggest a need for concern about the vulnerability of these medical students with regard to health risk behaviors and physical and mental health problems during training and in the future, in medical practice,” noted Wilkes.

The researchers acknowledged some limitations with the study. For one, it only involved one group of medical students.

Wilkes said they’re starting a study looking prospectively at nursing students, social work students, veterinary medical students and medical students. “Following forward, [we want to know] how do ACEs scores predict problems in medical school?” he asked. 

If their study findings are replicated in other medical schools with comparable results, Sciolla says it will be incumbent upon medical administrators and educators to consider finding solutions.

“Those physicians may be triggered by their own ACEs,” said Sciolla, “and they might be a barrier to providing quality care to those patients unless they’re given the resources and education to make that not a liability, but on the contrary, to make that a strength because they would have their own knowledge and their own learning of how to heal from that trauma so they could be more effective as healers of others.”

 

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I was at a recent conference where the attendees were asked to fill out the 10 point Ace questionaire.  Whilst we never saw the answers we were shown similar statistics that showed a higher percentage of females represented in the higher scores. Men by and large are less likely to disclose around sexual abuse than females  and more likely to minimise their experience in regard to trauma. When the ACE programme was first developed it was focused on females as victims of sexual abuse and the question around witnessing a mother or stepmother being physically abused instead of parent or caregiver is an example of the gender focus at the time.  I think the ACE assessment is a powerful tool but there is likely to be disparities in outcomes relative to gender and culture

Dugal Armour posted:

It is a dangerous assumption to think that those from a higher socio economic sector are less likely to be exposed to trauma. In fact to the contrary, coming from a higher socio economic background is more likely to have more pressure to 'rise above it' and show that they are doing well.  Vulnerability and success are often perceived as opposites.  Assisting men who have been sexually abused it appears that the most marginalised group are those that are supposedly doing well.  Abuse does not distinguish between race ,religion, gender or financial wealth.  More so in the mental health and psychiatric professions people are fuelled by a need to gain the tools to understand their own experience or to legitimise a distraction from their own pain. However as this article notes, if we are prepared to acknowledge the power of people acknowledging their own trauma and to use that in a professional setting to assist those with similar experiences we will have unlocked a powerful tool in assisting people's wellbeing.

Dugal, I agree with you completely. It surprised me to read the quote above by Dr. Andres Sciolla: “You can assume that because physicians, in general, and medical students, come from more affluent backgrounds than the general population that those medical students would have a lower prevalence of ACEs than the general population and that was not the case,” explained Sciolla.

While I'm glad their study proved that assumption false (of course it would), it concerns me that so many professionals hold that misguided and untrue belief. I'm a clinical social worker and psychotherapist. My social work masters program—40 years ago—taught me the prevalence of child abuse and neglect and how it cuts across socioeconomic, racial, and religious lines. Most social workers know this and it disturbs me to continue to see that so many professionals still don't understand it. But nevertheless, this study helped them see how acknowledging their own trauma will potentially help with patient care and that is a good thing.

Last edited by Diane Petrella

Laurie:
I LOVE reading your reporting. Glad to see the gender differences among those at the 4 and higher ACE scores notes as I've heard Donna Jackson Nakazawa talk about that as well but don't see much writing or reporting. It makes me wonder if we have any gender-specific remedies or buffers, as to what supports those with highest ACEs. Also, glad to see the study will be replicated among other students.

Interesting to see that although almost all the students scored high on the resiliency quiz, "Of those who reported an ACE score of 4 or higher, 100 % said that their mental health had been significantly or moderately impacted by their childhood trauma, compared with 26% of students with ACE scores of 3 or less." 

I always learn from your articles!

Cis

It is a dangerous assumption to think that those from a higher socio economic sector are less likely to be exposed to trauma. In fact to the contrary, coming from a higher socio economic background is more likely to have more pressure to 'rise above it' and show that they are doing well.  Vulnerability and success are often perceived as opposites.  Assisting men who have been sexually abused it appears that the most marginalised group are those that are supposedly doing well.  Abuse does not distinguish between race ,religion, gender or financial wealth.  More so in the mental health and psychiatric professions people are fuelled by a need to gain the tools to understand their own experience or to legitimise a distraction from their own pain. However as this article notes, if we are prepared to acknowledge the power of people acknowledging their own trauma and to use that in a professional setting to assist those with similar experiences we will have unlocked a powerful tool in assisting people's wellbeing.

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