School of Social Work, University of Maryland, Baltimore, Maryland, USA.
National Center for Institutional Diversity, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA.
J Community Psychol. 2021 Jul;49(5):1267-1281. doi: 10.1002/jcop.22595. Epub 2021 May 17.
This study explored religious emotional support as a mediator of the association between organized religious involvement (ORI) and mental well-being among African American and Caribbean Black girls. Data are drawn from a nationally representative survey of Black adolescents. The sample was composed of African American (n = 412) and Caribbean Black (n = 165) girls, aged 13-17. Structural equation modeling tested direct and indirect effects of ORI on mental well-being, through religious emotional support. For African American girls, ORI was not directly related to any of the mental well-being outcomes. Religious emotional support mediated the association between ORI and self-esteem, mastery, and life satisfaction. For Caribbean Black girls, ORI was negatively associated with mastery and life satisfaction. Religious emotional support mediated the association between ORI and life satisfaction. Results suggest that the well-being benefits of ORI for Black girls only remain significant in the presence of religious emotional support and are different for ethnic subgroups.
本研究探讨了宗教情感支持在组织宗教参与(ORI)与非裔美国人和加勒比黑人女孩心理健康之间的关系中的中介作用。数据来自对黑人青少年的全国代表性调查。样本由 412 名非裔美国女孩和 165 名加勒比黑人女孩组成,年龄在 13-17 岁之间。结构方程模型测试了 ORI 通过宗教情感支持对心理健康的直接和间接影响。对于非裔美国女孩来说,ORI 与任何心理健康结果都没有直接关系。宗教情感支持调节了 ORI 与自尊、掌握和生活满意度之间的关系。对于加勒比黑人女孩来说,ORI 与掌握和生活满意度呈负相关。宗教情感支持调节了 ORI 与生活满意度之间的关系。结果表明,ORI 对黑人女孩的幸福感的好处只有在存在宗教情感支持的情况下才仍然显著,并且对于不同的种族群体是不同的。