相信奇迹、宗教/精神斗争和抑郁症状:在压力、精神和健康研究中探索美洲印第安人、南亚人和白人群体的差异。

IF 1.3 Q3 PSYCHIATRY
Mental Health Religion & Culture Pub Date : 2024-01-01 Epub Date: 2025-04-22 DOI:10.1080/13674676.2025.2474163
Laura Upenieks, Blake Victor Kent, Alka M Kanaya, A Heather Eliassen, Shelley A Cole, Alexandra E Shields
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引用次数: 0

摘要

对奇迹的信仰很普遍,延伸到许多宗教传统、社会和文化中。本研究探讨了相信上帝通过奇迹治愈身体疾病与抑郁症状之间的关系,以及宗教/精神(R/S)斗争在缓冲或加剧这种关系中的可能的调节作用。我们利用压力,精神和健康研究(SSSH),它提供了广泛的R/S数据,包括南亚(SA)和美国印第安人(AI)的受访者,这方面的研究极度缺乏。结果表明,美国印第安人相信上帝对疾病有奇迹的可能性几乎是南亚人或白人护士的两倍。我们在美洲印第安人和南亚样本中记录了对奇迹的信仰与抑郁症状之间的无效关联,但在大多数白人女性中,对奇迹的信仰与较低的抑郁症状有关(与SA和AI样本不同,所有白人女性都是护士)。在所有三组中,与那些相信奇迹的人相比,那些不相信奇迹的人的R/S挣扎与更严重的抑郁症状有更强的联系。我们讨论了进一步研究的可能方向,并鼓励未来的工作,探索R/S的各个维度如何预测以美国白人为主的样本之外的健康和福祉以及疾病病因学。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Belief in Miracles, Religious/Spiritual Struggles, and Depressive Symptoms: Exploring Variation among American Indian, South Asian, and White Cohorts in the Study on Stress, Spirituality, and Health.

Belief in miracles is widespread, extending to many religious traditions, societies, and cultures. This study examines the relationship between a belief that God heals physical illness through miracles with depressive symptoms, and the possible moderating role of religious/spiritual (R/S) struggles in buffering or exacerbating this relationship. We utilize the Study on Stress, Spirituality and Health (SSSH), which provides a wide array of R/S data, including on South Asian (SA) and American Indian (AI) respondents for which there is an extreme lack of research. Results suggest that American Indians were almost twice as likely as South Asians or White nurses to believe in miracles by God in response to illness. We documented null associations between belief in miracles and depressive symptoms in the American Indian and South Asian samples, but a belief in miracles was linked to lower depressive symptoms among mostly White women (all of whom were employed as nurses, unlike the SA and AI samples). Across all three groups, R/S struggles had a stronger association with greater depressive symptoms for those who did not believe in miracles compared to those who did. We discuss possible directions for further research and encourage future work to explore how the various dimensions of R/S predict health and well-being and disease etiology beyond predominantly White U.S-based samples.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.50
自引率
12.50%
发文量
63
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