
Older adults are at greater risk of having a stroke if they experienced their parents divorcing during childhood, new research has found.
In the study, among Americans aged 65 and older, one in nine whose parents had divorced reported that they had been diagnosed with a stroke, compared to one in 15 of those whose parents had not divorced during their childhood.
Mary Kate Schilke is a university lecturer in the Psychology Department at Tyndale University and first author of the study.
She said: “Our study indicates that even after taking into account most of the known risk factors associated with stroke — including smoking, physical inactivity, lower income and education, diabetes, depression, and low social support — those whose parents had divorced still had 61 per cent higher odds of having a stroke,” says first author
The strong association found between parental divorce and stroke is similar in magnitude to two other well-established risk factors for stroke: diabetes and depression.
The study replicates research that the authors conducted with a different population-based sample almost a decade ago which found similarly strong links.
Senior author Esme Fuller-Thomson is a Professor at Factor-Inwentash Faculty of Social Work and Director for the Institute of Life Course and Aging at the University of Toronto.
Fuller-Thomson said: “We need to shed light on the mechanisms that may contribute to this association.
“While these types of survey-based studies cannot establish causality, we are hoping that our consistent findings will inspire others to examine the topic.”
The researchers excluded participants who had a history of childhood abuse.
Philip Baiden is an Associate Professor in the School of Social Work at the University of Texas at Arlington and co-author of the study.
He said: “We found that even when people hadn’t experienced childhood physical and sexual abuse and had at least one adult who made them feel safe in their childhood home, they still were more likely to have a stroke if their parents had divorced.”
Other forms of childhood adversity were not significantly associated with stroke in this study, including emotional abuse, neglect, household mental illness and substance abuse or exposure to parental domestic violence.
The study’s authors say it is unclear why the link between parental divorce and stroke exists, but theorize that there could be both biological and social factors at play.
Fuller-Thomson said: “From a biological embedding perspective, having your parents split up during childhood could lead to sustained high levels of stress hormones.
“Experiencing this as a child could have lasting influences on the developing brain and a child’s ability to respond to stress.”
The study was based on the 2022 Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance Survey and analysed survey responses from 13,205 older Americans, of whom 13.9 per cent had experienced parental divorce during their childhood.
If future research finds similar links between parental divorce and stroke, it is possible that knowledge about whether or not their patient grew up in an intact family will be used by health professionals improve targeted outreach for stroke prevention and education, Schilke said.









