Internalizing Symptoms Associated with Emotional Abuse: An Examination of Religious Social Support as a Moderating Variable

Emotional abuse in childhood is linked to an increased risk for internalizing symptoms such as depression and anxiety in adulthood. Religious social support offers a promising defense in maintaining mental well-being in the face of trauma. This study aims to investigate if religious social support i...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Chambers, Jessica, Morelen, Diana, Steadman, Jason, Hurley, Michelle
Format: Others
Published: Digital Commons @ East Tennessee State University 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dc.etsu.edu/honors/440
https://dc.etsu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1501&context=honors
id ndltd-ETSU-oai-dc.etsu.edu-honors-1501
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-ETSU-oai-dc.etsu.edu-honors-15012019-05-16T05:05:09Z Internalizing Symptoms Associated with Emotional Abuse: An Examination of Religious Social Support as a Moderating Variable Chambers, Jessica Morelen, Diana Steadman, Jason Hurley, Michelle Emotional abuse in childhood is linked to an increased risk for internalizing symptoms such as depression and anxiety in adulthood. Religious social support offers a promising defense in maintaining mental well-being in the face of trauma. This study aims to investigate if religious social support in childhood will moderate the impact of negative outcomes associated with emotional abuse. Further, this study will examine whether and how gender and ethnicity impact this relationship. The sample includes undergraduate students attending East Tennessee State University, located in the southeastern United States (n = 471, 73% female, 11% African American, M age = 20.37, SD = 4.84). Participants completed an online survey that asked about childhood experiences (e.g., emotional abuse, emotion socialization, religious social support) as well as current mental health (e.g., anxiety, depression). Data was analyzed using Statistical Software for the Social Sciences. Bivariate relations were examined through Pearson’s correlations and moderated moderation was tested via the Hayes Process Macro (version 3.0, Model 3). Results indicated that religious social support from childhood was negatively related to depression and anxiety whereas negative religious experiences from childhood were positively related to depression and anxiety. Harsh emotion parenting from childhood was positively related to depression and anxiety in adulthood. Results did not find support for moderated moderation for predicting depression or anxiety. Chi-squared indicated no significant differences in the percentage of individuals who endorsed childhood emotional abuse due to ethnicity, gender, or the interaction of gender and ethnicity. Future research would benefit from longitudinal designs that follow children across time to better understand whether and how religious social support may be a buffer for emotional abuse experienced in childhood. 2018-05-01T07:00:00Z text application/pdf https://dc.etsu.edu/honors/440 https://dc.etsu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1501&context=honors Copyright by the authors. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/ Undergraduate Honors Theses Digital Commons @ East Tennessee State University religious social support emotional abuse anxiety depression Clinical Psychology
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic religious social support
emotional abuse
anxiety
depression
Clinical Psychology
spellingShingle religious social support
emotional abuse
anxiety
depression
Clinical Psychology
Chambers, Jessica
Morelen, Diana
Steadman, Jason
Hurley, Michelle
Internalizing Symptoms Associated with Emotional Abuse: An Examination of Religious Social Support as a Moderating Variable
description Emotional abuse in childhood is linked to an increased risk for internalizing symptoms such as depression and anxiety in adulthood. Religious social support offers a promising defense in maintaining mental well-being in the face of trauma. This study aims to investigate if religious social support in childhood will moderate the impact of negative outcomes associated with emotional abuse. Further, this study will examine whether and how gender and ethnicity impact this relationship. The sample includes undergraduate students attending East Tennessee State University, located in the southeastern United States (n = 471, 73% female, 11% African American, M age = 20.37, SD = 4.84). Participants completed an online survey that asked about childhood experiences (e.g., emotional abuse, emotion socialization, religious social support) as well as current mental health (e.g., anxiety, depression). Data was analyzed using Statistical Software for the Social Sciences. Bivariate relations were examined through Pearson’s correlations and moderated moderation was tested via the Hayes Process Macro (version 3.0, Model 3). Results indicated that religious social support from childhood was negatively related to depression and anxiety whereas negative religious experiences from childhood were positively related to depression and anxiety. Harsh emotion parenting from childhood was positively related to depression and anxiety in adulthood. Results did not find support for moderated moderation for predicting depression or anxiety. Chi-squared indicated no significant differences in the percentage of individuals who endorsed childhood emotional abuse due to ethnicity, gender, or the interaction of gender and ethnicity. Future research would benefit from longitudinal designs that follow children across time to better understand whether and how religious social support may be a buffer for emotional abuse experienced in childhood.
author Chambers, Jessica
Morelen, Diana
Steadman, Jason
Hurley, Michelle
author_facet Chambers, Jessica
Morelen, Diana
Steadman, Jason
Hurley, Michelle
author_sort Chambers, Jessica
title Internalizing Symptoms Associated with Emotional Abuse: An Examination of Religious Social Support as a Moderating Variable
title_short Internalizing Symptoms Associated with Emotional Abuse: An Examination of Religious Social Support as a Moderating Variable
title_full Internalizing Symptoms Associated with Emotional Abuse: An Examination of Religious Social Support as a Moderating Variable
title_fullStr Internalizing Symptoms Associated with Emotional Abuse: An Examination of Religious Social Support as a Moderating Variable
title_full_unstemmed Internalizing Symptoms Associated with Emotional Abuse: An Examination of Religious Social Support as a Moderating Variable
title_sort internalizing symptoms associated with emotional abuse: an examination of religious social support as a moderating variable
publisher Digital Commons @ East Tennessee State University
publishDate 2018
url https://dc.etsu.edu/honors/440
https://dc.etsu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1501&context=honors
work_keys_str_mv AT chambersjessica internalizingsymptomsassociatedwithemotionalabuseanexaminationofreligioussocialsupportasamoderatingvariable
AT morelendiana internalizingsymptomsassociatedwithemotionalabuseanexaminationofreligioussocialsupportasamoderatingvariable
AT steadmanjason internalizingsymptomsassociatedwithemotionalabuseanexaminationofreligioussocialsupportasamoderatingvariable
AT hurleymichelle internalizingsymptomsassociatedwithemotionalabuseanexaminationofreligioussocialsupportasamoderatingvariable
_version_ 1719189541023121408