Spiritual Strength vs. Stress: What a University Survey Revealed

USAFri May 29 2026
A study at one faith‑based college in the United States collected data from faculty, staff and students during late 2021 to early 2022. Researchers used three established questionnaires: one for burnout, one for anxiety and depression, and a short tool that measures how often people attend services, pray or meditate privately, and how much religion matters in their daily life. The group that answered the survey numbered 125 people, including 17 teachers, 18 support staff and 90 learners. Their average age was about thirty years, most of them were women, and almost half went to a place of worship at least once each week. More than four in ten participants showed signs of clinical depression, and almost two‑thirds reported significant anxiety. Over half felt burnt out from their academic or professional responsibilities.
When the researchers compared these mental‑health scores to religious habits, they found that those who regularly attended services or engaged in personal prayer were less likely to suffer from depression and anxiety. Each type of religious activity—public worship, private devotion or a general sense that faith is important—was linked to lower odds of feeling mentally unwell. Burnout stood out as a strong predictor of both depression and anxiety: people who reported high burnout were ten to eleven times more likely to experience either condition. In short, the survey suggests that in a campus environment during a global crisis, faith‑based practices can offer some protection against psychological strain, while exhaustion from daily demands remains a major risk factor for poor mental health.
https://localnews.ai/article/spiritual-strength-vs-stress-what-a-university-survey-revealed-4e368c05

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