Meta-Analysis on Adverse Childhood Experiences and Non-Suicidal Self-Injury Risk
by Qian He·Updated 1mo ago
1.1 MB1files
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Description
Qian He's meta-analysis, last updated April 2026, synthesizes evidence from 13 observational studies on the association between Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs) and Non-Suicidal Self-Injury (NSSI). The analysis pools effect sizes using a random-effects model, reporting odds ratios for specific ACE types like physical, sexual, and emotional abuse. The dataset is a 1.1 MB document containing the full study methodology, results, and conclusions.
Use Cases
Quantifying the association strength between specific ACE types and NSSI risk based on reported odds ratios.
Informing clinical screening protocols based on the cumulative risk findings for individuals with multiple ACEs.
Supporting systematic review methodology by examining the search strategy and quality assessment process described.
Strengths
Includes specific pooled odds ratios and confidence intervals for multiple ACE categories, such as physical abuse (OR=2.38) and cumulative exposure (ACEs≥3, OR=6.13).
Provides a detailed methodological description, including the search databases, statistical model (random-effects), and analysis software (Stata 15).
Registered as a systematic review with a PROSPERO identifier (CRD42026128495), indicating a structured protocol.
Limitations
The underlying data (rows, columns) from the 13 included studies is not provided, limiting direct analysis.
The 1.1 MB file size suggests the dataset is a summary document rather than a raw data repository.
Column-level documentation is absent; field semantics must be inferred from the text after download.
Provenance
Source
Qian He via figshare.
Collection Method
Systematic review and meta-analysis of observational studies from PubMed, Embase, Web of Science, and Cochrane Library.
Time Range
Literature search covered from database inception to 30 November 2025.
Freshness
Last updated 2026-04-13 05:36:00.
Geography
null
Data is provided as a DOCX file, requiring compatible software for access.