The Baptist Standard | The Texas Baptist Newsjournal
     
 
Tuesday, February 09, 2010
Home arrow News arrow Ministers likely to dismiss or deny needs of mentally ill, Baylor study reveals
Register Register Help Tools
Subscribe to our FirstLook weekly
e-mail preview

 
Ministers likely to dismiss or deny needs of mentally ill, Baylor study reveals Print E-mail
By Matt Pene, Baylor University   
Published: November 13, 2008

WACO—With research consistently showing that clergy—not psychologists or other mental health experts—are the most common source of help sought in times of psychological distress, a recent Baylor University study has found ministers often deny or dismiss the existence of the mental illness.

In a study of 293 Christians who approached their local church for assistance in response to a personal or family member’s diagnosed mental illness, Baylor researchers found more than 32 percent of these church members were told by the pastor that they or their loved one did not really have a mental illness.

The study revealed these church members were told the cause of their problem was solely spiritual in nature, such as a personal sin, lack of faith or demonic involvement. Baylor researchers also found women were more likely than men to have their mental disorders dismissed by the church.

In a subsequent survey, Baylor researchers found the dismissal or denial of the existence of mental illness happened more in conservative churches than more liberal ones.

All of the participants in both studies previously were diagnosed by a licensed mental health provider as having a serious mental illness, like bipolar disorder and schizophrenia, prior to approaching their local church for assistance.

“The results are troubling because it suggests individuals in the local church are either denying or dismissing a somewhat high percentage of mental health diagnosis,” said Matthew Stanford, professor of psychology and neuroscience at Baylor, who led the study. “Those whose mental illness is dismissed by clergy are not only being told they don’t have a mental illness, they are also being told they need to stop taking their medication. That can be a very dangerous thing.”

Carrie Beaird, substance abuse coordinator for the Baptist General Convention of Texas Christian Life Commission, agreed the results of the study are troubling. Many ministers have not been trained in how to appropriately handle serious mental illnesses. Because of that, they either dismiss mental illnesses as spiritual issues or refer all possible cases of mental illness to trained professionals and do not follow up on the situations.

Clergy must find a middle- ground approach that values people and ministers to them for an extended amount of time, said Beaird, a licensed counselor.

“A lot of churches use an all-or-nothing model,” she said. “We need our churches and pastors to be educated in knowing when to refer. And even if they refer, know when and how to call later to follow up and see how things are going.”

Mental illnesses are like physical ailments, Beaird said. In some cases, they require the attention of trained medical personnel.

 

--With additional reporting by John Hall

 

 





Reddit!Del.icio.us!Google!Live!Facebook!Slashdot!Technorati!StumbleUpon!Spurl!Newsvine!Blinklist!Furl!Fark!Yahoo!Ma.gnolia!Free social bookmarking plugins and extensions for Joomla! websites!
Comments (4)Add Comment
...
written by JND, November 14, 2008
So – if one is diagnosed with mental illness, does that mean he actually is mentally ill? Any chance the minister might be right and the medical health expert wrong? Who knows the person better?

But that chance probably isn’t 32%.

By the way, what does “have their mental disorders dismissed by the church” mean? In the previous paragraph it was the pastor; now it’s the church. Surely, as Baptists, you folks aren’t going to confuse the two.

I’m going to jump out there and assume that that most pastors have more demands on them than they can actually accomplish. Where does “provide free mental health care” fit in that pecking order?

Is some sort of religious Catch-22 in effect here? Does one have to be crazy to seek mental health care from an untrained pastor?
...
written by Science Guy, November 15, 2008
I don't think anyone expects pastors to provide free mental health care. However, it would be appropriate for them to tell those who seek their help that mental illnesses are real, physical illnesses like pneumonia. Just as no compassionate person would tell someone with pneumonia to just buck up, shake it off, pray and have faith but not to seek medical treatment, no compassionate pastor should tell that to any member of his flock who seems to have mental problems.

I have heard pastors refer to anxiety as sin and to otherwise minimize depression and other conditions and imply it was lack of faith or somehow the sufferer's fault. I understand that the Bible tells us not to worry and to trust God, and I accept the truth and benefit of that advice. However, I have personally heard some pastors equate symptoms that would indicate anxiety disorder, not worry, with sin. This is just plain wrong. One can no more shake off anxiety disorder or depression on their own than they can shake off diabetes.

Should we pray for ourselves and other with mental problems? Absolutely. Should we tell them it's all in their imagination and if they pray right or believe right it will go away? NO. I have heard preachers say such things. Preachers need to encourage people who need mental health care to get it. Many could do a much better job.
The stigma is killing us!!!
written by Dr. Ginome M.-S., November 17, 2008
I agree with the last part of the article that the clergy can at least know when to refer. Few churches provide outreach areas to those who suffer from mental illness. The major programs are the 12-step program for addictions. However, mental illness is not an addiction, while addiction can occur in the mentally ill. Mental illness is a physiological phenomena that the neuropsychiatric researchers are honing in on and very interesting studies will come out in the future.

Prayer as a meditative non-judgmental force is great destressor. The key is non-judgmental... And many people feel that Christian churches strongly judge them. However, if one is diagnosed with a serious mental illness, stress levels are high, prayer and medical treatment combined can lead to recovery. I think it is a powerful combination.

I think that the clergy needs an awareness campaign and an outreach to them, then to their congregations. I think they would be willing to come on board if they knew the suffering that mentally ill people go through in their lives. Call it the healing waters...

The other issue about mental illness, such as bipolar, the very symptoms of this illness is "religiosity"--preaching as if one is an great Apostle and no one can tell them differently all to have grandiose plans fail. It is vehement convictions without mercy or grace... One day they are sitting in the back pew, the next day they are ready to become an elder, join all the church committees and witness to the sick... It is unreasonable and really, not from God... It is great to see that motivation, but it is a manic episode that will leave this person into a deep depression if plans fail. These are the same people that hurt innocent people in the name of God.

The reality is this illness can be treated and monitored by licensed healthcare providers. What the clergy can do is temper that zeal with scripture and prayer. Then determine if there is follow through with their treatments. Literally coach the sufferers through this rough patch.

And like someone stated, you would not tell someone with cancer to "shake it off" or to "pray about it" without medical intervention? And your brain is an organ and it can sick, too. So why not work together with the licensed healthcare professionals for a well-rounded, holistic option than just one way or the highway?
...
written by txjosh16, November 17, 2008
"Mental illnesses are like physical ailments, Beaird said. In some cases, they require the attention of trained medical personnel."

Not quite correct. Mental illnesses ARE physical ailments and should be treated by trained medical personnel.

Please read our Comments Covenant. Readers alone are responsible for the content of the comments they post here. The comments are subject to the site’s terms and conditions of use and do not necessarily reflect the opinion or approval of the Baptist Standard. Readers whose comments violate the terms of use may have their comments removed or all of their content blocked from viewing by other users without notification.
Write comment
You must be logged in to leave a comment. Login | Register
busy
 
< Prev   Next >
Copyright © 2007-2010 The Baptist Standard, All Rights Reserved.