Findings showed that when dealing with the stress arising from the conflict between religious and sexual identities, individuals used both positive and negative religious coping strategies, but only negative religious coping was associated with poorer mental health. In addition, only in the presence of social resources (social connections with the LGBT community and the acceptance of sexual orientation by friends), did the use of positive religious coping result in better mental health outcomes.
These findings underlined the importance of these resilience social factors in the lives of religious Jewish gay and bisexual men.
Via: http://ht.ly/RXsvk
By: Shilo G1, Yossef I, Savaya R.
- 1Bob Shapell School of Social Work, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv, 69978, Israel, shiloguy@post.tau.ac.il.
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