Spirituality and Psychological Well-Being Among ALS Caregivers: Hope and Perceived Stress as Mediators

The empirical study of the salutary relationship between spirituality/religiousness and psychological well-being is burgeoning. However, mechanisms of this association have received less empirical attention. Theory suggests that spirituality/religiousness may lead to positive psychological character...

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Main Author: Jeter, Bridget R
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: Digital Commons @ East Tennessee State University 2016
Subjects:
ALS
Online Access:https://dc.etsu.edu/etd/3058
https://dc.etsu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=4414&context=etd
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spelling ndltd-ETSU-oai-dc.etsu.edu-etd-44142019-05-16T04:56:00Z Spirituality and Psychological Well-Being Among ALS Caregivers: Hope and Perceived Stress as Mediators Jeter, Bridget R The empirical study of the salutary relationship between spirituality/religiousness and psychological well-being is burgeoning. However, mechanisms of this association have received less empirical attention. Theory suggests that spirituality/religiousness may lead to positive psychological characteristics such as hope, which may function as a means of coping in the context of a significant stressor or stressful situation. The perceived burden and stress associated with caring for individuals with chronic illnesses such as ALS is significant, and caregivers may be at risk for increased symptoms of depression, symptoms of anxiety, somatic symptoms, and other deleterious psychological well-being related outcomes. Within the context of ALS caregiving, spirituality/religiousness may lead to hope and less perceived stress, ultimately contributing to increased caregiver psychological well-being. Cross-sectional mediation-based analyses were conducted on data collected from a sample of 85 ALS caregivers throughout the U.S., The Netherlands, and Belgium. Participants were 78.8% female, 92.9% Caucasian, 48.2%, spent over 100 hours per week caregiving, and the average age was 55.2 years. Ritualistic spirituality was not related to psychological well-being in ALS caregivers in a direct or indirect fashion. Theistic spirituality was directly, positively related to psychological well-being in ALS caregivers. Existential spirituality was directly related to psychological well-being, but in a deleterious fashion. However, when hope and perceived stress were considered as mediators within the model, the effect changed such that existential spirituality contributed salutarily to psychological well-being when operating though hope alone and also in conjunction with perceived stress. This study may be the first of its kind to explicitly model spirituality and psychological well-being in ALS caregivers, thus more research to investigate the caregiving process, barriers, promotion, and means of coping is warranted. 2016-05-01T07:00:00Z text application/pdf https://dc.etsu.edu/etd/3058 https://dc.etsu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=4414&context=etd Electronic Theses and Dissertations eng Digital Commons @ East Tennessee State University ALS Caregiver Spirituality Well-Being Hope Perceived Stress Developmental Psychology Health Psychology Mental and Social Health Neurology Palliative Care Psychology Rehabilitation and Therapy
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic ALS
Caregiver
Spirituality
Well-Being
Hope
Perceived Stress
Developmental Psychology
Health Psychology
Mental and Social Health
Neurology
Palliative Care
Psychology
Rehabilitation and Therapy
spellingShingle ALS
Caregiver
Spirituality
Well-Being
Hope
Perceived Stress
Developmental Psychology
Health Psychology
Mental and Social Health
Neurology
Palliative Care
Psychology
Rehabilitation and Therapy
Jeter, Bridget R
Spirituality and Psychological Well-Being Among ALS Caregivers: Hope and Perceived Stress as Mediators
description The empirical study of the salutary relationship between spirituality/religiousness and psychological well-being is burgeoning. However, mechanisms of this association have received less empirical attention. Theory suggests that spirituality/religiousness may lead to positive psychological characteristics such as hope, which may function as a means of coping in the context of a significant stressor or stressful situation. The perceived burden and stress associated with caring for individuals with chronic illnesses such as ALS is significant, and caregivers may be at risk for increased symptoms of depression, symptoms of anxiety, somatic symptoms, and other deleterious psychological well-being related outcomes. Within the context of ALS caregiving, spirituality/religiousness may lead to hope and less perceived stress, ultimately contributing to increased caregiver psychological well-being. Cross-sectional mediation-based analyses were conducted on data collected from a sample of 85 ALS caregivers throughout the U.S., The Netherlands, and Belgium. Participants were 78.8% female, 92.9% Caucasian, 48.2%, spent over 100 hours per week caregiving, and the average age was 55.2 years. Ritualistic spirituality was not related to psychological well-being in ALS caregivers in a direct or indirect fashion. Theistic spirituality was directly, positively related to psychological well-being in ALS caregivers. Existential spirituality was directly related to psychological well-being, but in a deleterious fashion. However, when hope and perceived stress were considered as mediators within the model, the effect changed such that existential spirituality contributed salutarily to psychological well-being when operating though hope alone and also in conjunction with perceived stress. This study may be the first of its kind to explicitly model spirituality and psychological well-being in ALS caregivers, thus more research to investigate the caregiving process, barriers, promotion, and means of coping is warranted.
author Jeter, Bridget R
author_facet Jeter, Bridget R
author_sort Jeter, Bridget R
title Spirituality and Psychological Well-Being Among ALS Caregivers: Hope and Perceived Stress as Mediators
title_short Spirituality and Psychological Well-Being Among ALS Caregivers: Hope and Perceived Stress as Mediators
title_full Spirituality and Psychological Well-Being Among ALS Caregivers: Hope and Perceived Stress as Mediators
title_fullStr Spirituality and Psychological Well-Being Among ALS Caregivers: Hope and Perceived Stress as Mediators
title_full_unstemmed Spirituality and Psychological Well-Being Among ALS Caregivers: Hope and Perceived Stress as Mediators
title_sort spirituality and psychological well-being among als caregivers: hope and perceived stress as mediators
publisher Digital Commons @ East Tennessee State University
publishDate 2016
url https://dc.etsu.edu/etd/3058
https://dc.etsu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=4414&context=etd
work_keys_str_mv AT jeterbridgetr spiritualityandpsychologicalwellbeingamongalscaregivershopeandperceivedstressasmediators
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