People who experience parental divorce during childhood have higher levels of an inflammatory marker in the blood which is known to predict future health, according to new research.
Researchers from University College London (UCL) found that children who experienced the breakdown in their parent's relationship before the age of 16, regardless of whether their parents were married or not, had 16 per cent higher levels of C-reactive protein at age 44.
C-reactive protein is a marker of inflammation measured in blood samples. Long-term raised C-reactive protein is a known risk factor for diseases such as coronary heart disease and type II diabetes.
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The authors also looked at why this relationship might exist. They found that the relationship between parental divorce and later inflammation was mainly explained by adolescent material disadvantage and educational attainment, although the specific mechanisms remain unclear.
In particular, those who experienced parental separation before the age of 16 were more likely to be materially disadvantaged in adolescence and had lower educational qualifications by adulthood, compared to children who grew up with both parents.
"Our study suggests that it is not parental divorce or separation per se which increases the risk of later inflammation but that it is other social disadvantages, such as how well the child does in education, which are triggered by having experienced parental divorce which are important," said Dr Rebecca Lacey, Research Associate in the UCL Department of Epidemiology and Public Health and lead author of the study.
The study was published in journal
Psychoneuroendocrinology.