Hot topics close

One Twin Was Hurt, the Other Was Not. Their Adult Mental Health Diverged.

One Twin Was Hurt the Other Was Not Their Adult Mental Health Diverged
A large study of “discordant twins,” in which only one suffered abuse or neglect, adds to evidence linking childhood trauma to adult illness.
SKIP ADVERTISEMENT
You have a preview view of this article while we are checking your access. When we have confirmed access, the full article content will load.

Supported by

SKIP ADVERTISEMENT

One Twin Was Hurt, the Other Was Not. Their Adult Mental Health Diverged.

A large study of “discordant twins,” in which only one suffered abuse or neglect, adds to evidence linking childhood trauma to adult illness.

  • Share full article
  • 134
Two girls with braided brown hair and matching pink tank tops watch a baseball game.
Identical twin sisters at a Twins Day celebration in Twinsburg, Ohio, in 2019.Credit...Josie Gealer/Getty Images
Ellen Barry
March 6, 2024

Twins are a bonanza for research psychologists. In a field perpetually seeking to tease out the effects of genetics, environment and life experience, they provide a natural controlled experiment as their paths diverge, subtly or dramatically, through adulthood.

Take Dennis and Douglas. In high school, they were so alike that friends told them apart by the cars they drove, they told researchers in a study of twins in Virginia. Most of their childhood experiences were shared — except that Dennis endured an attempted molestation when he was 13.

At 18, Douglas married his high school girlfriend. He raised three children and became deeply religious. Dennis cycled through short-term relationships and was twice divorced, plunging into bouts of despair after each split. By their 50s, Dennis had a history of major depression, and his brother did not.

Why do twins, who share so many genetic and environmental inputs, diverge as adults in their experience of mental illness? On Wednesday, a team of researchers from the University of Iceland and Karolinska Institutet in Sweden reported new findings on the role played by childhood trauma.

Their study of 25,252 adult twins in Sweden, published in JAMA Psychiatry, found that those who reported one or more trauma in childhood — physical or emotional neglect or abuse, rape, sexual abuse, hate crimes or witnessing domestic violence — were 2.4 times as likely to be diagnosed with a psychiatric illness as those who did not.

If a person reported one or more of these experiences, the odds of being diagnosed with a mental illness climbed sharply, by 52 percent for each additional adverse experience. Among participants who reported three or more adverse experiences, nearly a quarter had a psychiatric diagnosis of depressive disorder, anxiety disorder, substance abuse disorder or stress disorder.

We are having trouble retrieving the article content.

Please enable JavaScript in your browser settings.

Thank you for your patience while we verify access. If you are in Reader mode please exit and log into your Times account, or subscribe for all of The Times.

Thank you for your patience while we verify access.

Already a subscriber? Log in.

Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

SKIP ADVERTISEMENT
Similar news
News Archive
  • Luc Montagnier
    Luc Montagnier
    Nobel Laureate Luc Montagnier, Who Co-Discovered HIV, Dies At 89
    12 Feb 2022
    2
  • Lobster fishing
    Lobster fishing
    Climate change risk low to moderate for billion-dollar Nova Scotia lobster fishery, study says
    9 Mar 2024
    1
  • Kane Cornes
    Kane Cornes
    'Not too hard to hit': Cornes well beaten in AFL greats' boxing battle ...
    3 Apr 2024
    2
  • Isaiah Thomas
    Isaiah Thomas
    Isaiah Thomas Gets That Boston Celtics Vibe in Debut With the Charlotte Hornets
    3 Mar 2022
    7