NRODUCTION: The ACE (Adverse Childhood Experiences) concept is based on the results of an American population-based cohort study published in the American Journal of Preventive Medicine in 1998. ACE is classified into three groups: abuse, neglect, and household challenges. The main goal of our work is the identification and description of factors affecting the psychosocial development of an individual in a family with a parent with a long-term addiction in relation to the development of a criminal career. METHODS: The main research method was represented by the life stories of the participants. As the participants were incarcerated, the records of their life stories were not collected directly, but via the educational staff of the correctional facility. Transcriptions of the dialogues were segmented and the individual parts sorted into the corresponding categories. Thus, for each area, a hierarchically organized system of categories was created, which captured the biggest problems in all of the areas under analysis. During this part of the research, we worked with the ATLAS.ti program. RESULTS: We identified: a) a high occurrence of the meaning categories Home environment and Neglect in the answers of the participants, predicting a significant relationship between home environment, neglect of children, and their risk behaviour in adolescence and adulthood, b) the highest occurrence of the Home environment meaning category of the ACE model covering the violence, addictive substance use, and divorce segments, c) the lowest occurrence of the Abuse of power toward a child ACE model meaning category, and d) the highest occurrence of abuse and neglect of the participants on the emotional level. The trajectories of the participants show risk behaviour in their adolescence continuing into adulthood. CONCLUSIONS: Regarding the results of the research, we point out the need for resilience in the family and its resistance to stress-generating factors represented unequivocally by the meaning categories of the ACE model.
- MeSH
- Depersonalization etiology psychology MeSH
- Mental Fatigue MeSH
- Financing, Organized MeSH
- Humans MeSH
- Workload MeSH
- Burnout, Professional diagnosis etiology MeSH
- Surveys and Questionnaires MeSH
- Stress, Psychological MeSH
- Risk Factors MeSH
- Statistics as Topic MeSH
- Teaching methods manpower MeSH
- Nurses psychology MeSH
- Check Tag
- Humans MeSH