SINGAPORE – Experiencing childhood adversities like abuse could impair mental health and negatively affect work life later on as young workers, a study found.
Researchers found that young Singaporean workers who have gone through abuse, been exposed to someone in their home abusing substances or experienced poverty as children were associated with lower perceived health and, in turn, poorer sense of job security, lower self-efficacy and lower optimism about the future.
This points to a pressing need for employers and organisations to acknowledge and address the potential impact that adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) have in the workplace, the researchers said.
A new study published in peer-reviewed journal Taylor & Francis Online in May explored whether such experiences may influence the overall life outcomes of young workers in a professional environment.
The study was done by Griffith Business School’s associate professor Carys Chan, who is based in Australia, and the National University of Singapore’s (NUS) Department of Social Work and Social Service Research Centre.
Of the 1,229 individuals surveyed, close to 60 per cent had experienced at least one childhood adversity. About 15 per cent had experienced two, while 4 per cent had experienced all three types.
The study focused on three forms of childhood adversity – abuse, living with someone who abused substances, and being raised in poverty.
The respondents were surveyed in two waves, between October 2020 and March 2021 for the first wave and from November 2021 to May 2022 for the second wave.
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