Most Clergy Follow Science on Depression Treatment, Duke Study Finds
Most clergy surveyed said they counsel congregation members to seek medical help for depression
A new Duke University study appears to ease concerns that clergy would steer congregants suffering from depression away from mental health providers and instead rely only on their faith.
Clergy are often the first point of contact for people suffering from depression. About 90 percent of clergy members surveyed for the Duke study embrace a medical understanding of depression; about 10 percent said they’d counsel their congregation members to address depression solely through religious means.
“We consider this good news,” Mark Chaves, a Duke professor of sociology, religious studies, and divinity, who co-authored a new paper on the study.
“We’ve known for a while that a lot of people bring their mental health challenges to clergy,” Chaves said. “There’s been concern about what clergy have been telling them. Have they been telling them just to pray, or to see a doctor? This should allay concerns.”
The study will be published on January 11 in JAMA Psychiatry. Co-author Anna Holleman, a Duke postdoctoral research associate, said survey results largely held true across denominations.
“We couldn’t find any subset of clergy in which anything but a small minority rejected medical wisdom,” Holleman said.
Study data came from Duke’s National Survey of Religious Leaders, a nationally representative survey of clergy serving U.S. congregations from across the religious spectrum. The survey, funded by the John Templeton Foundation, was conducted in 2019 and 2020 – largely prior to the COVID-19 pandemic and its associated uptick in mental health challenges. The survey drew responses from 1,600 congregational leaders, 890 of whom were their congregation’s primary leader. The survey cooperation rate for primary leaders was 70 percent. These results use responses from those 890 primary leaders.
The Duke study is the first to survey a nationally representative sample of clergy specifically on the issue of depression, the authors said. The results include clergy opinions about both the causes of depression and appropriate treatments for it, Holleman said. Few clergy disputed conventional medical wisdom about either the cause or treatment of depression. At the same time, more endorsed mixing both medical and religious responses to it – combining a doctor’s treatment with prayer and church attendance – than believe in both medical and religious causes of depression.
That mixing of medical and religious responses to depression is not limited to clergy, Holleman noted.
“Even some secular mental health professionals recognize that people’s spiritual or religious activities can be assets that people already have and can draw on in beneficial ways,” she said. “We see a lot of potential here for constructive collaboration between mental health professionals and clergy.”
The small number of clergy who rejected medical advice in favor of religious options in the treatment of depression were largely leaders of Black protestant and white evangelical congregations. Even among those groups, though, only a small minority – about 15 percent – endorsed substituting religious for medical responses.
A divide between religious and mental health professionals has existed for at least a century, though their views about mental illness have converged somewhat in the last couple of decades as more information about biological causes of depression and the effectiveness of medication has become widely available, said Harold G. Koenig, a Duke professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences who studies the effects of religion and spirituality on health.
Koenig, who is not connected to the clergy study, said its results were heartening.
“The majority of mental health professionals are not religious, and that’s a problem because the majority of their patients are,” Koenig said. “So it’s encouraging to see the vast majority of clergy see depression as something that is more likely to have biological or situational rather than religious causes.”
“Life is hard. Things happen,” Koenig said. “You get disappointed. You get divorced. So religion can be extremely helpful in dealing with these issues. But some folks need more than religion – they need medication,” he said. “You need treatment. You can’t pray it all away.”
Citation
US Religious Leaders’ Views on the Etiology and Treatment of Depression, Anna Holleman, Mark Chaves, JAMA Psychiatry, Jan. 11, 2023, DOI: 10.1001/jamapsychiatry.2022.4525