Currier Joseph M, McDermott Ryon C, Sanders Peter, Richards P Scott
Department of Psychology, University of South Alabama.
Department of Counseling and Instructional Sciences, University of South Alabama.
Psychotherapy (Chic). 2025 Sep;62(3):424-431. doi: 10.1037/pst0000581. Epub 2025 May 15.
Longitudinal evidence indicates struggles with spirituality/religion (S/R; e.g., feeling distant or abandoned by God, guilty for not attaining standards of moral perfection, judged by one's family or community) may cause distress and hinder recovery from mental health challenges. However, research has not examined temporal associations between spiritual struggles and psychological distress in spiritually integrated psychotherapies (SIPs). In total, 175 practitioners of SIPs from 38 clinics and other settings in a practice-research network assessed these outcomes with 1,404 clients over the first 6 weeks of treatment (Time 1 [Weeks 1-2], Time 2 [Weeks 3-4], and Time 3 [Weeks 5-6]). In keeping with findings from other samples (e.g., Cowden et al., 2022, 2024; Currier et al., 2015, 2018), cross-lagged panel analyses across the three time points revealed spiritual struggles predicted clients' psychological distress at the next interval rather than vice versa. Specifically, whereas psychological distress was not predictive of later spiritual struggles, clients who were struggling with their S/R at Time 2 were generally more psychologically distressed at Time 3. Further, the positive prospective association between spiritual struggles at Time 1 and psychological distress at Time 3 was mediated by the severity of spiritual struggles at Time 2. In combination, these findings affirm spiritual struggles drive many clients' depression, anxiety, and other symptoms over the course of SIPs. As such, clinicians will ideally cultivate foundational knowledge and skills about the darker side of S/R that might prepare them to address their clients' spiritual struggles throughout the treatment process when clinically indicated. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2025 APA, all rights reserved).
纵向证据表明,与精神信仰/宗教相关的挣扎(例如,感觉与上帝疏远或被上帝抛弃、因未达到道德完美标准而感到内疚、受到家人或社区的评判)可能会导致痛苦,并阻碍从心理健康挑战中恢复。然而,研究尚未考察精神整合心理治疗(SIPs)中精神挣扎与心理痛苦之间的时间关联。在一个实践研究网络中,来自38个诊所和其他机构的175名SIPs从业者在治疗的前6周(时间1[第1 - 2周]、时间2[第3 - 4周]和时间3[第5 - 6周])对1404名客户的这些结果进行了评估。与其他样本的研究结果一致(例如,考登等人,2022年、2024年;柯里尔等人,2015年、2018年),对三个时间点进行的交叉滞后面板分析显示,精神挣扎预测了下一个时间段客户的心理痛苦,而非相反。具体而言,虽然心理痛苦并不能预测后来的精神挣扎,但在时间2时与精神信仰/宗教挣扎的客户在时间3时通常心理痛苦程度更高。此外,时间1时的精神挣扎与时间3时的心理痛苦之间的正向前瞻性关联是由时间2时精神挣扎的严重程度介导的。综合来看,这些发现证实了在SIPs过程中,精神挣扎会导致许多客户出现抑郁、焦虑和其他症状。因此,理想情况下,临床医生应培养关于精神信仰/宗教阴暗面的基础知识和技能,以便在临床需要时,他们能够在整个治疗过程中应对客户的精神挣扎。(《心理学文摘数据库记录》(c)2025年美国心理学会,保留所有权利)