El-Khoury Mai Y, Dutton Mary Ann, Goodman Lisa A, Engel Lisa, Belamaric Robin J, Murphy Megan
Department of Psychology.
Department of Psychiatry.
Cultur Divers Ethnic Minor Psychol. 2004 Nov;10(4):383-393. doi: 10.1037/1099-9809.10.4.383.
The primary goal of this study was to identify ethnic differences in battered women's use of health, mental health, and spiritual coping strategies, as well as differences in the perceived helpfulness of each strategy. The authors recruited a sample of 376 African American and Caucasian victims of interpersonal violence from various sites. In comparison with Caucasian women in the sample, African American women were significantly more likely to report using prayer as a coping strategy and significantly less likely to seek help from mental health counselors. The 2 groups did not significantly differ in terms of the extent to which they sought help from clergy or medical professionals. African American women found prayer to be more helpful than did Caucasian women.
本研究的主要目的是确定受虐妇女在使用健康、心理健康和精神应对策略方面的种族差异,以及每种策略在感知帮助程度上的差异。作者从不同地点招募了376名非裔美国人和白人人际暴力受害者作为样本。与样本中的白人女性相比,非裔美国女性报告使用祈祷作为应对策略的可能性显著更高,而向心理健康顾问寻求帮助的可能性显著更低。两组在向神职人员或医疗专业人员寻求帮助的程度上没有显著差异。非裔美国女性发现祈祷比白人女性更有帮助。