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Perceptions of Divine Forgiveness, Religious Comfort, and Depression in Psychiatric Inpatients: A Mixed Methods Study.

Alexis D AbernethyCharlotte van Oyen WitvlietLindsey M Root LunaJoshua D FosterKatharine M PutmanJoseph M CurrierSarah A SchnitkerKarl Van HarnJanet Carter
Published in: Journal of religion and health (2022)
Understanding how forgiveness relates to mental health outcomes may improve clinical care. This study assessed 248 adult psychiatric inpatients, testing associations of forgiveness, religious comfort (RC), religious strain (RS), and changes in depressive symptomatology from admission to discharge. Experiencing divine forgiveness and self-forgiveness was both directly associated with RC and inversely associated with RS. Using structural equation modeling, the path from divine forgiveness to depression through RC was significant, β =  - .106, SE = .046, z =  - 2.290, p = .022, bootstrapped 95% CI =  - .196 to - .015. Qualitative findings illustrated patients' changed perspectives on divine forgiveness during hospitalization.
Keyphrases
  • mental health
  • healthcare
  • depressive symptoms
  • emergency department
  • newly diagnosed
  • systematic review
  • primary care
  • sleep quality
  • prognostic factors
  • bipolar disorder
  • health insurance
  • childhood cancer