2019冠状病毒病大流行期间宗教少数群体的依恋、宗教信仰和感知压力:文化背景的影响

Pub Date : 2021-06-24 DOI:10.1177/00916471211025532
Elizabeth Schwaiger, Syeda Saniya Zehra, Ivan Suneel
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引用次数: 5

摘要

2019冠状病毒病大流行对世界各地的压力水平产生了深远影响。在巴基斯坦等发展中国家,缺乏资源和社会经济不平等加剧了这一流行病的负面影响,特别是对少数民族。在巴基斯坦这个发展中、集体主义、穆斯林占多数的国家,宗教是一个强大的身份标志,从出生时就继承下来,并反映在所有身份证件中。一个完善的宗教概念框架是对上帝的依恋,这在西方样本中显示出对感知压力的强大预测价值。考虑到其他依恋关系的重要性,本研究考察了在巴基斯坦背景下,对父母的依恋、对上帝的依恋和宗教信仰对基督教少数民族感知压力的预测价值。样本包括183名巴基斯坦成年基督徒。多元回归表明,宗教信仰、对父亲的依恋和对上帝的依恋是感知压力的最强预测因子,尽管与西方环境中预期的模式不同。这一发现表明了文化、依恋关系和宗教背景对感知压力的影响的重要性,表明需要在心理护理中考虑宗教和文化,以及当地和国际公共政策,以减轻发展中国家少数民族在这种不确定时期的压力。
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Attachment, Religiosity, and Perceived Stress Among Religious Minorities During the COVID-19 Pandemic: The Impact of Cultural Context
The COVID-19 pandemic has had a profound effect on stress levels around the world. In developing nations such as Pakistan, lack of resources and socioeconomic inequalities have compounded the negative impact of the pandemic, especially for minorities. Religion in the developing, collectivistic, Muslim-majority nation of Pakistan is a powerful identity marker inherited at birth and reflected in all identifying documents. A well-developed conceptual framework for religion is attachment to God, which has demonstrated strong predictive value for perceived stress in Western samples. Given the importance of other attachment relationships as well, this study has examined the predictive value of attachment to parents, attachment to God, and religiosity on perceived stress in Christian minorities within a Pakistani context. The sample consisted of 183 adult Christian Pakistanis. Multiple regression indicated that religiosity, attachment to father, and attachment to God were the strongest predictors of perceived stress, though not in the same pattern as expected in Western contexts. This finding demonstrates the importance of the impact of culture, attachment relationships, and religious context on perceived stress, indicating a need to consider both religion and culture in psychological care, as well as local and international public policy, to mitigate stress along minorities in developing nations in such uncertain times.
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