Genes (Apr 2022)

Family Financial Pressure in Childhood and Telomere Length in Early Adolescence: A Prospective Study

  • Keith T. S. Tung,
  • Rosa S. Wong,
  • Hing Wai Tsang,
  • Wilfred H. S. Wong,
  • Winnie W. Y. Tso,
  • Jason C. Yam,
  • Terry Y. S. Lum,
  • Godfrey C. F. Chan,
  • Ian C. K. Wong,
  • Patrick Ip

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/genes13050721
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 5
p. 721

Abstract

Read online

Much research on children in high-risk environments has focused on the biological consequences of maltreatment, adversity, and trauma. Whether other early-life stress sources such as family financial hardship are implicated in the cellular mechanism of disease development remains unclear. This study investigated the long-term effect of childhood exposure to family financial pressure on telomere length. It involved two waves of data collection occurring when participants reached Grade 3 (W1) and 7 (W2), respectively. In W1, parents reported family demographics and perceived financial stressors and pressure. In W2, participants provided buccal swab samples for measurement of their telomere length. Data from 92 participants (Mage in W2 = 13.2 years; 56.5% male) were analyzed. The main type of stressors reported by parents who perceived high family financial pressure in W1 were child-level stressors including affordability of their medical and educational expenses. Participants exposed to high parent-perceived family financial pressure in W1 had shorter telomeres in W2 when compared to those exposed to low parent-perceived family financial pressure (β = −0.61, p = 0.042). Subgroup analyses revealed stronger associations in girls than boys. These findings reveal an important spillover effect between parental financial perceptions and stress and children’s health at the cellular level.

Keywords