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Religious and Spiritual Factors in Depression

“There are certainly many factors that influence the risk of depression besides R/S, including genetic, developmental, and environmental factors. However, in the majority of studies, everything else being equal, R/S involvement is related to less depression, particularly in the context of life stress. The systematic review discussed above indicates many more studies show possible benefits from R/S compared to those that show possible harm (61% versus 6% of studies). Nevertheless, a number of high-quality studies show that R/S involvement may increase the risk of depression in certain populations (those with family problems) or may worsen the prognosis of depression (a single study in substance abusers). Interventions that utilize the R/S beliefs of patients have been tested in randomized clinical trials and shown to reduce depressive symptoms, and clinical trials are now examining the effects of religious psychotherapy against standard therapies [62]. R/S involvement appears to be related to depression in way or another. Given the worldwide prevalence of both R/S and depression, the frequent use of R/S as a coping behavior and reported effectiveness, and the serious disability that depression causes, researchers and clinicians need to better understand how R/S impacts mental health and vice versa.”

[ncbi.nlm.nih.gov]

“Religiously unaffiliated subjects had significantly more lifetime suicide attempts and more first-degree relatives who committed suicide than subjects who endorsed a religious affiliation.”

[ajp.psychiatryonline.org]

“In contrast to the scholarship supporting the linear model of belief in God and mental health, findings from some studies have suggested that certainty of the belief that God exists or certainty of the belief that God does not exist is more pertinent than the belief itself. That is, regardless of the content of the belief, it is the certainty of that belief that influences well-being; uncertainty itself is distressing (McNulty et al. 2004). These studies have found a curvilinear relationship between belief and well-being such that those with greater certainty in their belief—either in the existence of God or the non-existence of God—had higher well-being relative to those who were less certain or doubtful (Galen and Kloet 20; Krause 2006; Paterson and Francis 20).”

“These findings suggest that meaning in life, feeling comforted by God, and healthy coping strategies for most of the variance in the relationship between belief in God and depression. Individuals with a greater belief in God had a greater sense of meaning in life, which in turn was associated with less depression. This finding is consistent with the broader literature showing that meaning in life functions as a mediator of the effect of religiosity on mental health (Park 2007).”

[mdpi.com]

“Many people suffering from the pain of mental illness, emotional problems, or situational difficulties seek refuge in religion for comfort, hope, and meaning. While some are helped, not all such people are completely relieved of their mental distress or destructive behavioural tendencies. Thus it should not be surprising that psychiatrists will often encounter patients who display unhealthy forms of RS involvement. In other instances, especially in the emotionally vulnerable, religious beliefs and doctrines may reinforce neurotic tendencies, enhance fears or guilt, and restrict life rather than enhance it. In such cases, religious beliefs may be used in primitive and defensive ways to avoid making necessary life changes.
However, systematic research published in the mental health literature to date does not the argument that religious involvement usually has adverse effects on mental health. Rather, in general, studies of subjects in different settings (such as medical, psychiatric, and the general population), from different ethnic backgrounds (such as Caucasian, African American, Hispanic, and Native American), in different age groups (, middle-aged, and elderly), and in different locations (such as the United States and Canada, Europe, and countries in the East) find that religious involvement is related to better coping with stress and less depression, suicide, anxiety, and substance abuse. While religious delusions may be common among people with psychotic disorders, healthy normative religious beliefs and practices appear to be stabilizing and may reduce the tremendous isolation, fear, and loss of control that those with psychosis experience. Clinicians need to be aware of the religious and spiritual activities of their patients, appreciate their value as a resource for healthy mental and social functioning, and recognize when those beliefs are distorted, limiting, and contribute to pathology rather than alleviate it.”

[journals.sagepub.com]

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skado 9 Mar 12
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8 comments

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1

I sometimes wonder who the subjects are that these studies are based on. It's been a long time since I was working a job will crew members. As a non believer I did not get into discussions on R/S, to the point one supervisor stopped me in the hall one day and demanded to know if I believed in God. I literally felt that if we were suddenly teleported to the 1600s I'd been burned at the stake as a witch. I simply asked/stated, where do you think it all comes from and hurried back to the cameraroom. YIKES!
I've been at odds with society since I popped outta the womb - identical twin, left handed, quit going to church, never into the make-up fashion dating thing, worked in a male dominated job, never wanted kids, etc. and been depressed. Group experience helps some people but not everyone.

It’s not limited to groups. I’m not a group person myself. The only thing it needs to be about is learning what biological forces are at play, and managing them effectively.

2

I am assuming these are observational studies rather than controlled experiments. Could it be that just the community participation aspect of religions is helping rather than religious rituals or belief? As in, would being devoted to a sports team equally likely to reduce depression as RS?

Blimey, imo, you are hitting poor old skado with questions well beyond his capable remit are you not?

I think there’s some truth in that. A sense of community, support, and identity must figure in significantly.

1

TLDR, religion /spiritualism doesn't make you less likely to have depression. I think religion causes depression in lgbt people, because it is against it. Spirituality is subjective, coming from the mind.

Actually as a still practising Psychologist I can safely say and could, if Patient Privacy Laws would allow, exhibit factual evidence that amongst the 'believers' there IS a much rate of mental illnesses such as Depressions, Anxieties, Panic Attacks, etc, etc, than amongst the Non-religious.

1

Very interesting. It helps one way and hurts another way. Thanks makes sense.

3

We make our own meaning in life. Spiritual is just a word. It means what you want it to mean regardless of having any belief about gods.

0

Clearly I didn't read that and I'm trying to get L2 bb

3

Of course suicide is higher in the religiously unaffiliated. Most religions preach that suicide will result in terrible punishment. Suicide isn't always bad. Those with severe chronic pain whether "mental" or "physical" (in quotation marks because mental is actually physical) suicide may be the only way out.

Suicidal people held back by religious dictat isn't a convincing argument. When someone is suicidal do you really think they care what some prophet wrote millenia ago?

Yes, I do. When I was xtian I was very much afraid of going to hell and that was a major reason I didn't commit suicide. I still contemplate suicide but the main reason I don't do it is it would leave my dog without me.

@Theresa_N hmm, that makes sense. I have only recently come to know the terror of hell for Christians

2

Ho hum, it is time to be bored shitless, @skado is posting drivel yet again imo.

I concur for L2 ofc.

@Tjnamp well best of luck on your "quest" but be well aware the times WILL come when you can no longer depend solely upon mere trite res[onses, i.e. YOU will need to actually think and type PLUS offer up thoughts, opinions, etc, etc.

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