Gender differences in the relationship between religion/spirituality, well-being and depression.

Q4 Medicine
Psychiatria Hungarica Pub Date : 2021-01-01
Oláh Julianna, Beatrix Koronczai
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Abstract

Background and aims: Numerous studies report the positive effects of religion/spirituality on mental health, including the positive association of religion/spirituality with well-being and negative association with depressive symptoms. However, few studies focus on how gender influences the relationship between religion/spirituality and mental health, and to date, no research has been conducted on this aspect among emerging adults. This study aims to test the qualitative and quantitative gender differences in the relationship between religion/spirituality and depression and well-being among emerging adults.

Method: In this mixed methodological study, data (N=523; women=62%, age=18-28) were collected with a questionnaire including CES-D-R (depression), WBI-5 (well-being), BMMRS (multidimensional measurement of religion/spi - rituality) and two open-ended qualitative questions on the perceived negative and positive effects of religion/spirituality among emerging adults.

Results: Results show a moderate relationship between religion/spirituality and well-being, as well as between religion/spirituality and depression among women, and a weak relationship between these variables among men. The dimensions of religion/spirituality which showed a significant association with well-being and depression varied by gender. According to the qualitative data, both genders conceptualize the effects of religion/spirituality on their lives in the same way; yet, a significant gender difference was found in the frequency of five qualitative codes.

Conclusion: Findings highlight the importance of dimensional approach towards religion/spirituality in research and suggest gender differences in the effect-mechanism of religion/spirituality on the mental health of emerging adults. Besides, still unreported forms of the perceived negative and positive effects of religion/spirituality were found.

宗教/灵性、幸福感和抑郁之间关系的性别差异。
背景和目的:许多研究报告了宗教/灵性对心理健康的积极影响,包括宗教/灵性与幸福感的正相关和与抑郁症状的负相关。然而,很少有研究关注性别如何影响宗教/灵性与心理健康之间的关系,迄今为止,还没有在新兴成年人中进行这方面的研究。本研究旨在检验新兴成人中宗教/灵性与抑郁和幸福感之间关系的定性和定量的性别差异。方法:采用混合方法学研究,资料(N=523;女性=62%,年龄=18-28岁)通过问卷调查收集问卷,包括ce - d - r(抑郁),WBI-5(幸福感),BMMRS(宗教/spi - ritual的多维测量)和两个开放式定性问题,关于新兴成年人对宗教/灵性的消极和积极影响的感知。结果:结果显示宗教/灵性与幸福感之间,以及宗教/灵性与女性抑郁之间存在中等关系,而男性之间这些变量之间的关系较弱。宗教/灵性的维度显示出与幸福和抑郁的显著关联,因性别而异。根据定性数据,两性对宗教/灵性对其生活的影响的概念化方式相同;然而,在五种定性编码的频率上发现了显著的性别差异。结论:研究结果强调了宗教/灵性维度方法在研究中的重要性,并提示了宗教/灵性对新兴成人心理健康的影响机制存在性别差异。此外,还发现了尚未报道的宗教/灵性的消极和积极影响形式。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Psychiatria Hungarica
Psychiatria Hungarica Medicine-Medicine (all)
CiteScore
0.40
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