Black American Muslims: a study of religious identity and mental health

IF 1.3 Q3 PSYCHIATRY Mental Health Religion & Culture Pub Date : 2022-09-14 DOI:10.1080/13674676.2022.2116632
Husain A Lateef, Osman Umarji
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Abstract

ABSTRACT Racism is a salient societal-level factor that adversely impacts the mental health of Black Americans. Although religiosity and racial identity have been studied in this population as protective factors, few studies have specifically considered Black American Muslims. We assessed the relationship between religious and racial identity on mental health-related factors among 499 Black American Muslims, utilising data from a cross-sectional study of Muslims in America conducted by the Yaqeen Institute for Islamic Research. Cluster analysis results indicated a five-cluster solution. Differential associations were identified between cluster membership and psychological health outcomes. Participants in profiles characterised by a belief in the low societal regard for Muslims and Blacks had significantly worse mental health than did those in other profiles. The analysis further identified religiosity, gratitude, and private regard as buffering mental health agents, with uncertainty intolerance and John Henryism being related risk factors. Implications for future research are discussed.
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美国黑人穆斯林:宗教认同与心理健康的研究
摘要种族主义是一个突出的社会层面因素,对美国黑人的心理健康产生了不利影响。尽管宗教信仰和种族认同作为保护因素在这一人群中进行了研究,但很少有研究专门考虑美国黑人穆斯林。我们利用雅琴伊斯兰研究所对美国穆斯林进行的一项横断面研究的数据,评估了499名美国黑人穆斯林在心理健康因素方面的宗教和种族认同之间的关系。聚类分析结果表明采用了五个聚类的解决方案。集群成员与心理健康结果之间存在差异性关联。以相信社会对穆斯林和黑人的重视程度低为特征的档案中的参与者的心理健康状况明显比其他档案中的人差。该分析进一步确定了宗教信仰、感恩和私人关怀是心理健康的缓冲因素,不确定性不容忍和约翰·亨利主义是相关的风险因素。讨论了对未来研究的启示。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.50
自引率
12.50%
发文量
63
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