Forgiveness Clinical Trial
Official title:
Examining Prison Inmates' Attitudes and Internal Emotional States: Forgiveness, Anger, Anxiety, Depression, Hope, and Social Desirability
This study is the first part of a two-tiered research project to propose a novel approach-forgiveness therapy-to corrections. This study is a non-intervention study and aims to demonstrate the need to introduce the concepts of forgiveness and Forgiveness Therapy within prisons. This study is focused on the extent to which men in a maximum-security prison experienced considerable injustice against them (such as in a family context as he was growing up) prior to committing serious crimes. Variables associated with this prior unjust treatment included the level of forgiveness and variables of current psychological well-being. Since this study provided the rationale and participants' matching data (eligibility) for the subsequent interventional study (Study 2, "Proposing Forgiveness Therapy in Prison") in which psychological treatments applied to the inmates, investigator refer to this study as Study 1.
Current study (Study 1) consisted of 103 men in a maximum-security prison in the Midwestern
United States. The research aimed to demonstrate the necessity of introducing forgiveness
concepts and Forgiveness Therapy within the prison. This study collected percentage and
correlational data regarding the presence of hurtful unfair treatments and psychological
compromises, recognizing the style of the story-recalling (e.g. repetitive angry retelling;
focus on damage; focus on fear; focus on despair, and so forth), rating of the injury types,
and severity and age of occurrence. Inmates' stories were coded and analyzed by up to five
researchers. The first wave of data examined a) whether participants have been treated deeply
unfairly prior to their crime and imprisonment and the degree of severity; b) the degree to
which the participants' show both excessive anger and unforgiveness toward those who acted
unjustly as well as their expressions in crimes—direct contribution to their choice of
harming the innocent; and c) the relationship among the excessive anger, forgiveness, and
related emotional sufferings and psychological distresses such as anxiety and depression.
Case studies were also conducted. Reliability and validation of 30-Item Enright forgiveness
inventory (EFI-30) in the prison context were also tested. In general, we tested the
following hypotheses:
1. Do most inmates in this maximum-security prison experience severe unfair treatment
against them before their criminal perpetrations?
2. Do most inmates in this maximum-security prison have low forgiveness towards the person
who deeply hurt them?
3. Do disproportional number of inmates in this maximum-security prison have clinical
compromises (e.g. excessive anger, anxiety, and depression) related to their past
injustice?
4. Does higher degree of anger/anxiety in inmates correlates to the less forgiving behavior
towards those who hurt them in the past, prior to their crime?
Study 1 also provided participant matching data (criteria for eligible participants) for the
Forgiveness Therapy experiments of subsequent interevtional study
;
Status | Clinical Trial | Phase | |
---|---|---|---|
Not yet recruiting |
NCT06136676 -
From the Heart: Comparing the Effects of Spiritual and Secular Meditation on Psychophysiology, Cognition, Mental Health, and Social Functioning in Healthy Adults
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT04373954 -
Proposing Forgiveness Therapy Within Prison
|
N/A | |
Recruiting |
NCT05660148 -
Influence of Resentment and Forgivingness on Quality of Life in People Living With HIV
|