Childhood trauma and parenting in at-risk mental state: Clarifying pathways and expanding perspectives

Published in World Journal of Psychiatry, 2025

Jovani et al’s study contributes important evidence linking childhood trauma (CT) and parental socialization with at-risk mental state (ARMS) in non-clinical adolescents, demonstrating the mediating role of low levels of parental affection and communication in this relationship. This letter commends the study’s strengths while also identifying key issues that warrant further attention, including the limitations of cross-sectional design, potential perceptual biases, conceptual overlap between CT and parenting, and limited cultural generalizability. We advocate for longitudinal, culturally sensitive, and multi-informant approaches to further refine ARMS risk models, strengthen theoretical distinctions between CT and parenting, and inform targeted prevention strategies across diverse populations. We also extend the discussion by highlighting promising directions for future research.

Recommended citation: Wang, X.* (2025). Childhood trauma and parenting in at-risk mental state: Clarifying pathways and expanding perspectives. World Journal of Psychiatry. 15(11): 112624.
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