In the early days of the pandemic, economist Jeanet Bentzen of the University of Copenhagen examined Google searches for the word “prayer” in 95 countries. She identified that they hit an all-time global high in March 2020, and increases occurred in lockstep with the number of COVID-19 cases identified in each country. In the USA, according to the Pew Research Center, 55 percent of Americans prayed to end the spread of the novel coronavirus in March 2020, and nearly one quarter reported that their faith increased the following month, despite limited access to houses of worship.
These are not just interesting sociological trends—they are clinically significant. Spirituality has historically been dismissed by psychiatrists, but results from a pilot program at McLean Hospital in Massachusetts indicate that attention to it is a critical aspect of mental health care.
In 2017 David Rosmarin and his multidisciplinary team of mental health clinicians, researchers and chaplains created Spiritual Psychotherapy for Inpatient, Residential and Intensive Treatment (SPIRIT), a flexible and spiritually integrated form of cognitive-behavioural therapy. They subsequently trained a cadre of more than 20 doctors, stationed on 10 different clinical units throughout McLean Hospital, to deliver SPIRIT and evaluated the approach. Since 2017, SPIRIT has been delivered to more than 5,000 people. Their results suggest that spiritual psychotherapy is not only feasible but highly desired by patients.
In the past year, American mental health sank to the lowest point in history: Incidence of mental disorders increased by 50 percent, compared with before the pandemic, alcohol and other substance abuse surged, and young adults were more than twice as likely to seriously consider suicide than they were in 2018. Yet the only group to see improvements in mental health during the past year were those who attended religious services at least weekly (virtually or in-person): 46 percent report “excellent” mental health today versus 42 percent one year ago. As former congressional representative Patrick J. Kennedy and journalist Stephen Fried wrote in their book A Common Struggle, the two most underappreciated treatments for mental disorders are “love and faith.”
It’s no wonder that nearly 60 percent of psychiatric patients want to discuss spirituality in the context of their treatment. Yet psychiatrists and doctors rarely provide such an opportunity. Since Sigmund Freud’s characterisation of religion as a “mass-delusion” nearly 100 years ago, mental health professionals and scientists have eschewed the spiritual realm. Current efforts to flatten the COVID-19 mental health curve have been almost entirely secular. The American Psychological Association’s extensive set of consumer resources makes no mention of spirituality. And the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s only spiritual recommendation is to “connect with your community- or faith-based organisations.” Of more than 90,000 active projects presently funded by all 27 institutes and centers within the National Institutes of Health, fewer than 20 mention spirituality anywhere in the abstract, and only one project contains this term in its title. Needless to say, a lack of funding for research on spirituality hamstrings clinical innovation and dissemination.
This situation goes beyond separation of church and state. Health care professionals falsely disconnect common spiritual behaviours and experiences from science and clinical practice. As a result, potential spiritual solutions to our mental health crisis are ingnored, even when our well-being is worse than ever before.
Rosmarin’s research has demonstrated that a belief in God-Spirit is associated with significantly better treatment outcomes for acute psychiatric patients. And other laboratories have shown a connection between religious belief and the thickness of the brain’s cortex, which may help protect against depression. Of course, belief in God is not a prescription. But these compelling findings warrant further scientific exploration, and patients in distress should certainly have the option to include spirituality in their treatment.
Countless anecdotes of the value of a belief in God-Spirit were found during the recent year-long clinical trial of SPIRIT that Rosmarin’s research team. More than 90 percent of patients reported experiencing some kind of benefit, regardless of religious affiliation.
The study also revealed key opportunities in patient care, particularly for younger and seemingly secular patients. Psychiatric folklore has long suggested that psychotic, manic and obsessive patients gravitate more toward spirituality, as do older adults. Rosmarin’s findings, however, suggest that patients benefited from SPIRIT irrespective of their diagnosis or age. Apparently, depressed millennials are just as likely to want and benefit from spiritual psychotherapy as geriatric patients.
Their results also suggest that spiritual care is not only for religious individuals. The largest group of patients to voluntarily attend SPIRIT (39 percent of the sample) were individuals with no religious affiliation at all. Apparently many nonreligious people still seek spirituality, especially in times of distress. In fact, such individuals may be most likely to attend spiritual psychotherapy because their spiritual needs are otherwise ignored. In this vein, recent declines in church membership may actually increase the need for spiritual care.
Perhaps most interesting, patients responded better to SPIRIT when it was delivered by religiously unaffiliated clinicians. This surprising finding suggests that secular doctors may be particularly effective in providing spiritual treatment. This is good news because psychiatrists are the least likely of all doctors to be religious!
It remains to be seen whether God-Spirit can solve our mental health crisis. But the potential clinical benefits of spirituality, and patients’ desire for spiritual treatments, provide a reason to believe (and hope) that it can!
REFERENCES:
Jeanet Bentzen. Rising religiosity as a global response to COVID-19 fear.
https://voxeu.org/article/rising-religiosity-global-response-covid-19-fear
PEW Research Center
David H. Rosmarin et al. Spiritual Psychotherapy for Inpatient, Residential, and Intensive Treatment. American Journal of Psychotherapy (2019), volume 72, issue 3, pages 75-83.
David H. Rosmarin et al. Predictors of Patients’ Responses to Spiritual Psychotherapy for Inpatient, Residential, and Intensive Treatment (SPIRIT). Psychiatr. Serv. (2021) volume 72, issue 5, pages 507-513.
Megan Brenan. Americans’ Mental Health Ratings Sink to New Low.
https://news.gallup.com/poll/327311/americans-mental-health-ratings-sink-new-low.aspx
William Wan
https://www.washingtonpost.com/health/2020/11/23/covid-pandemic-rise-suicides/
Patrick J. Kennedy and Stephen Fried. A Common Struggle: A Personal Journey Through the Past and Future of Mental Illness and Addiction. 2016. Blue Rider Press.
David H. Rosmarin et al. Interest in spiritually integrated psychotherapy among acute psychiatric patients. J Consult Clin Psychol (2015) volume 83, number 6, pages 1149-53.
American Psychological Association, Help Center.https://www.apa.org/helpcenter
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. ‘Coping With Stress.’ https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/daily-life-coping/managing-stress-anxiety.html
Lindsay Abrams. People Who Believe in God Are More Responsive to Treatment of Depression.
Lisa Miller et al. Spirituality, religion may protect against major depression by thickening brain cortex (2014).
https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2014/01/140116084846.htm
Farr A. Curlin et al. The Relationship Between Psychiatry and Religion Among U.S. Physicians. Psychiatr Serv.(2007). Volume 58, number 9, pages 1193–1198.