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Article
Religiosity: Reducing Depressive Symptoms Amongst Muslim Females in the United Arab Emirates
All Works
  • Justin Thomas
  • Meera Mutawa
  • Steven W. Furber
  • Ian Grey
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
12-30-2016
Abstract

Religiosity has previously been associated with greater wellbeing, as well as with lower rates of depressive disorders and less severe levels of depressive symptoms. Relatively few studies however, have explored this association in Muslim populations. The present study explores the relationship between religiosity and depressive symptoms amongst female citizens of the United Arab Emirates. Using a cross-sectional correlational design, a convenience sample of college students (N = 459) completed the Religious Conviction Inventory (RCI-10), adapted to the Islamic context, along with the Beck Depression Inventory (BDI-II). Both instruments demonstrated good psychometric properties and as hypothesized, religiosity was negatively correlated with depressive symptoms. Further, individuals categorized as experiencing severe depressive symptoms reported significantly lower levels of religiosity, compared to their asymptomatic counterparts. These findings lend further support to the idea that religiosity may act as a resilience-factor in the context of depression, extending this idea to female citizens of the United Arab Emirates. The findings of this study are understood in the context of the second wave of positive psychology, called PP 2.0, which looks at positive and negative factors in individual's lives as both interact to produce positive clinical outcomes.

Indexed in Scopus
No
Open Access
No
https://middleeastjournalofpositivepsychology.org/index.php/mejpp/article/view/41/37
Citation Information
Justin Thomas, Meera Mutawa, Steven W. Furber and Ian Grey. "Religiosity: Reducing Depressive Symptoms Amongst Muslim Females in the United Arab Emirates" Vol. 2 (2016) p. 9 - 21
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/justin-thomas28211/53/