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Negative religious coping is associated with blunted cardiovascular reactivity and higher self-reported stress in response to acute psychological stress

Date
2026
Abstract
Objective: Negative religious coping is associated with adverse mental health and well-being. However, the majority of research focuses on general life stress; few studies have examined negative religious coping in response to a standardized acute psychological stressor. The present study examined the relationship between negative religious coping and physiological and psychological responses to acute stress. Methods: Young adults (N = 81, Mage = 19.63 years, age range 18.27 - 28.87 years, 65.4% female, 18% Hispanic, and 64.2% White) completed baseline and stress task phases and cardiovascular activity was measured throughout. Negative religious coping was assessed using the Brief Religious Coping Scale. Results: Hierarchical linear regressions adjusting for baseline measures, religiousness, sex, neuroticism, and depression scores demonstrated that lower diastolic blood pressure reactivity was associated with higher negative religious coping. Higher self-reported stress in response to the task was associated with higher negative religious coping. Systolic blood pressure and heart rate reactivity were not associated with negative religious coping in final models. Conclusion: In response to standardized acute stress, negative religious coping is associated with increased feelings of stress but not increased physiological responses to stress.
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Description
Publisher
American Psychological Association
Citation
Psychology of Religion and Spirituality
Funding code
Funding Information
Sustainable Development Goals
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License
Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International
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