Childhood Abuse and the Mental Health of Seminary Students: The Mediating Role of R/S Struggles

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2024-01-01

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Abstract

Seminary students have been found to be at a higher risk of experiencing abuse in childhood compared with the general U.S. population, as well as demonstrate mental health struggles. This study aims to understand how R/S struggles might explain the relationship between childhood abuse (emotional, physical, and sexual) among a sample of seminary students, a group that is at a higher risk of experiencing emotional and physical abuse in childhood compared to the general U.S. population. Drawing on a unique sample of seminary students at a Mainline Protestant seminary, (N = 535), regression results suggest that among seminary students, all forms of childhood abuse studied (emotional, physical, and sexual) were associated with greater depressive and anxiety symptoms. We also found consistent evidence that R/S struggles were a mediator of this pathway, explaining anywhere between 20 percent and 35 percent of the overall association between each form of childhood abuse and depressive and anxiety symptoms. This study adds to the growing body of literature describing the associations between childhood trauma and mental health, as well as the role of R/S struggles. We also discuss how seminaries and divinity schools should implement targeted programs for students with a history of childhood abuse.

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well-being, seminary students, childhood abuse, R/S struggles

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10.1177/0034673X241302420

Publication Info

Upenieks, L, DE Eagle and A Holleman (2024). Childhood Abuse and the Mental Health of Seminary Students: The Mediating Role of R/S Struggles. Review of Religious Research. 10.1177/0034673X241302420 Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/32064.

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Scholars@Duke

Eagle

David E Eagle

Associate Research Professor of Global Health

I am an Assistant Research Professor the Center for Health Policy and Inequalities Research and the Duke Global Health Institute. I am an expert on the health of religious clergy, the changing shape of churches in North American society, and the implications of these trends for the professional training of ministers.

More recently, my research has begun to branch out internationally. I am doing research on clergy in the Eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo, and studying the mental health of sexual and gender minorities around the world.

Methodologically, I am skilled in the collection and analysis of survey data, including longitudinal and social network data.

Anna Holleman

Research Associate

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