Institute of Psychology, University of Zürich, Psychopathology and Clinical Intervention, Zürich, Switzerland.
University Research Priority Program "Dynamics of Healthy Aging", University of Zürich, Zürich, Switzerland.
Stress Health. 2022 Dec;38(5):1058-1069. doi: 10.1002/smi.3157. Epub 2022 May 11.
There is a lack of empirical research on the heterogeneity in well-being of individuals who disaffiliated (i.e., left or were expelled) from an exclusionary and demanding faith community. Thus, little quantitative knowledge exists on factors related to resilience in these individuals. Therefore, the study aims were twofold: (1) to identify profiles of well-being in ex-members; and (2) to examine the characteristics of the identified profiles. A cross-sectional online survey assessed ex-members of various fundamentalist Christian faith communities. Latent profile analysis identified latent heterogeneity within the sample. Well-being profile indicators included perceived stress, psychopathological symptoms, affect, and satisfaction with life. Profile-related characteristics included socio-demographics (i.e., gender, age), membership (i.e., reason for joining, duration, extent of involvement, reasons for exit, social support during exit, and time since the exit), and resilience-supporting resources (i.e., social support, self-esteem, sense of coherence, personality, socio-economic status). In the final sample (N = 622, Mage = 41.34 years; 65.60% female), four distinct profiles were identified: resilient (25.70%), normative (36.40%), vulnerable (27.20%), and adverse (10.70%). The resilient profile was characterised by higher age, lower reporting of abuse or maltreatment as exit reason, and highest levels of resilience-supporting resources. Ex-members of fundamentalist Christian faith communities differ substantially in their well-being. Membership aspects were only weakly related to current well-being, with the exception of the exit reason of abuse or maltreatment. This study provided novel quantitative insights into the well-being profiles of individuals who disaffiliated from a fundamentalist Christian faith community in German-speaking countries.
目前缺乏关于从排他性和苛刻的信仰群体中脱离(即离开或被驱逐)的个体幸福感异质性的实证研究。因此,关于这些个体的与适应力相关的因素的定量知识很少。因此,研究目的有两个:(1)确定前成员的幸福感状况;(2)检查确定的特征的特点。一项横断面在线调查评估了不同原教旨主义基督教信仰群体的前成员。潜在剖面分析确定了样本中的潜在异质性。幸福感状况指标包括感知压力、心理病理症状、情感和生活满意度。与特征相关的特征包括社会人口统计学特征(即性别、年龄)、成员资格(即加入原因、持续时间、参与程度、退出原因、退出期间的社会支持以及退出后时间)和适应力支持资源(即社会支持、自尊、归属感、人格、社会经济地位)。在最终样本(N=622,Mage=41.34 岁;65.60%为女性)中,确定了四个不同的特征:适应力强(25.70%)、正常(36.40%)、脆弱(27.20%)和不利(10.70%)。适应力强的特征是年龄较大、退出原因报告虐待或虐待的比例较低,以及适应力支持资源的水平最高。原教旨主义基督教信仰群体的前成员在幸福感方面存在很大差异。成员资格方面与当前幸福感的相关性很弱,虐待或虐待作为退出原因除外。这项研究为德语国家从原教旨主义基督教信仰群体中脱离的个体的幸福感状况提供了新颖的定量见解。