Study finds Clergy dismiss Depression,
Anxiety the most often
Newswise — In 2008, a Baylor University
study found nearly a third of those who
approached their local church for assistance
in response to a personal or family member’s
diagnosed mental illness were told by their
church pastor that they or their loved one
did not really have a mental illness.
Baylor researchers have now built upon that
research and have found that depression and
anxiety are the mental illnesses that are
dismissed the most often.
Research consistently shows that clergy –
not psychologists or other mental health
experts – are the most common source of help
sought in times of psychological distress.
The Baylor researchers surveyed 168 pastors
affiliated with the Baptist General
Convention of Texas (BGCT).
As a whole, the sample consisted of large,
affluent congregations in suburban settings
with senior pastors who were highly
educated, predominately Caucasian and
theologically conservative.
The Baylor study found that despite
recognizing a biological basis to all mental
illness, the views of the BGCT pastors
surveyed vary across disorders in how much
they believe environmental or spiritual
factors, such as personal sin, lack of faith
or demonic involvement, play a role.
Major depressive disorders and anxiety
disorders were viewed by pastors as having
greater environmental and spiritual
involvement and were more often dismissed
than the more “severe” mental illnesses like
schizophrenia or bipolar disorder.
The study also found that pastors viewed
inconsistent parenting as the main driving
force behind AD/HD. Pastors viewed
medication as more effective in disorders
seen as predominately biological, compared
to those with greater environmental or
spiritual involvement.
“The results are troubling because the
demographic of this sample is considered to
have the most and easiest access to mental
health care, but yet, by their admission,
they seem unwilling to access mental health
care that is available to their
congregants,” said Dr. Matthew Stanford,
professor of psychology and neuroscience at
Baylor, who led the study.
“A majority of them also do not believe they
come into contact with very many congregants
that have a legitimate mental illness,
however we know roughly one in four
Americans will be diagnosed with a mental
illness this year, making it likely that
they will come in contact with it.”
In addition, the study found for those
congregants with mental illness, the BGCT
pastors surveyed were reluctant to refer to
mental health professionals who the pastors
perceived or knew not to be Christian. When
a mental health professional was known to be
a Christian, the likelihood of referral by
pastors was much higher.