Religious folks are healthier!!!!

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Religious observance may keep older people healthy By Anne Harding
Wed Nov 15, 1:32 PM ET



NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - A new study adds to mounting evidence that older people who regularly attend religious services are healthier than those who don't.

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Among 1,174 highly functioning men and women in their 70s, those who went to a church, synagogue or mosque at least once a week had a significantly slower decline in their lung function over the following years than their peers who didn't go to services regularly, Dr. Joanna Maselko, now at Temple University in Philadelphia, and her colleagues report.

Maselko, who conducted the study while at the Harvard School of Public Health in Boston, used peak expiratory flow rate (PEFR), which measures the volume of air a person is able to expel from the lungs, to gauge lung function in the study participants.

At the study's outset, in 1988, 65 percent of female participants and 51 percent of men reported attending religious services regularly. Over the follow-up period, which averaged 4.6 years, PEFR declined twice as much in the people who didn't attend church services regularly compared with those who did.

While the more religious individuals were more physically active and also less likely to smoke, these differences didn't account for their better lung function.

People experience a steady decline in lung function as they age, and impaired lung function is a key early warning sign of many health problems, making pulmonary health and excellent gauge of overall health, Maselko told Reuters Health.

Religious service attendance likely protects people by giving them a supportive community, she added in an interview. "In the US, social isolation among the elderly is a huge problem," she said. "That's associated with all sorts of health problems, mental and physical."

Religion can also offer older people a psychological resource for coping with end of life issues, she added, while meditating, praying and singing at religious services may have benefits in and of itself. "The next step in the research is to try to unpack these things."

"I don't think the take-home message is if you don't go to church you should start," she added. "It's too early to really say this us what you should do, this is what you shouldn't do." Instead, she said, the findings provide additional evidence that "there's something there."

SOURCE: Annals of Behavioral Medicine, November 2006.

Spirituality may help people live longer
November 17, 1999
Web posted at: 11:15 AM EST (1615 GMT)



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In this story:

Go to church, live longer

Spiritual, healthy habits

Probing further

Support for the inner self

RELATEDS


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By John A. Cutter

(WebMD) -- Why do older people who regularly attend religious services appear to live longer and have better health? Is it something about the type of people they are? Or is it something related to their visits to churches or synagogues? Perhaps increased contact with other people?

A growing body of research is beginning to define the complex connections between religious and spiritual beliefs and practices and an individual's physical and psychological health. No one says it's as simple as going to services or "finding religion" later in life. It may be that people who are more involved in religious activities, or are personally more spiritual, are doing something that makes them feel better emotionally and helps them live longer and more healthily. The question, researchers say, is what exactly are they doing?

"There is an increasing interest in the subject among researchers and the public," says Susan H. McFadden, Ph.D., of the University of Wisconsin at Oshkosh, who is co-chair of the Religion and Aging interest group of the Gerontological Society on Aging (GSA), a national group of researchers in aging.

Aging experts will discuss religion, spirituality and aging at the GSA annual conference, which starts Friday in San Francisco. Sessions will include a discussion of a new report -- from the National Institute on Aging and the Fetzer Institute, a Michigan foundation interested in mind/body issues -- that details research on the religious and spiritual dimensions of health.

Go to church, live longer

Among the most recent findings in this area: People who attend religious services at least once a week are less likely to die in a given period of time than people who attend services less often. These results -- published in the August 1999 issue of the Journal of Gerontology: Medical Sciences -- came out of a study examining almost 4,000 North Carolina residents ages 64 to 101.

People who attended religious services at least once a week were 46 percent less likely to die during the six-year study, says lead author Harold G. Koenig, M.D., of Duke University Medical Center in Durham, North Carolina. "When we controlled for such things as age, race, how sick they were and other health and social factors, there was still a 28 percent reduction in mortality," he says.

Koenig, a psychiatrist, says the regular churchgoers showed a reduction in their mortality rate comparable to that of people who don't smoke over those who do.

Spiritual, healthy habits

Other large studies have had similar results. Some smaller studies have also shown that spirituality may be beneficial: People who attend religious services, or who feel they are spiritual, experience lower levels of depression and anxiety; display signs of better health, such as lower blood pressure and fewer strokes; and say they generally feel healthier.

Researchers, including Koenig, say there are limitations to the conclusions anyone should draw from these studies. It could be that people who attend religious services benefit from the social network they form. "It might be that people in churches and synagogues watch out for others, especially the elderly," encouraging them, for example, to get help if they look sick, Koenig says.

Also, it's known that among today's older men and women, religious belief often leads to less risky behavior, such as less alcohol consumption and smoking. And religious beliefs -- or a strong feeling of spirituality outside of traditional religions -- may improve an individual's ability to cope with the stresses of everyday life and the tribulations of aging, experts say.

Or it could be, McFadden says, that certain personality types cope better with life -- and those are the types of people who also attend services more regularly.

Probing further

Future research might benefit from new survey questions that scientists developed recently. In October, the National Institute on Aging and the Fetzer Institute released a report on new measurement tests. With these tests, researchers may be able to probe more deeply into the connections between health and spirituality, says Ellen Idler, Ph.D., of Rutgers University in New Jersey, who helped write part of the report.

For example, the new tests ask questions about daily spiritual experiences, private religious practices, beliefs and values -- not just about regular church attendance, as some earlier studies did.

"There are private behaviors, attitudes, public behaviors and activities," Idler says of the aspects of an individual's spiritual life. "It is a tremendous, multidimensional model."

Support for the inner self

Even people who don't describe themselves as religious probably can benefit from some of the lessons uncovered by research into spirituality and aging, says Harry R. Moody, Ph.D., a gerontologist and author of "The Five Stages of the Soul."

"The message isn't 'Go back to church and you'll live a long time,' but 'Stay connected with people on your own wavelength,'" says Moody, until recently the director of the Brookdale Center on Aging at Hunter College in New York City.

This could mean, for example, joining small prayer groups not associated with any church, trying personal meditation, writing your life story, searching inside for personal meaning in life as you age and face death, remaining optimistic about life even if age and illness take their toll, and forging social connections with family, friends and others.

"You have to discover what is your subjective way of coping with life and tap into it," Moody says.

John A. Cutter covered aging issues for the St. Petersburg Times in Florida for more than six years until late 1998, and during that time he won awards from the American Society on Aging, the Alzheimer's Association and the Southeastern Association of Area Agencies on Aging. He will begin writing a syndicated column on aging for Copley News Service in December. Cutter expects to finish his master's degree in gerontology in spring 2000 at the University of South Florida in Tampa, where he is studying media and aging.


Copyright 1999 webmed, Inc. All rights reserved.
 
Readin' the bible daily will help their mental function well, too. It's the spiritual that needs to grow to help the body, mind, heart to function well. I am not that 100% good at describin' but, I know it's a fact that it does work well. Only through Jesus Christ that will work miracle. :)
 
Readin' the bible daily will help their mental function well, too. It's the spiritual that needs to grow to help the body, mind, heart to function well. I am not that 100% good at describin' but, I know it's a fact that it does work well. Only through Jesus Christ that will work miracle. :)


Yeah it is good to be a member of the church and volunteer in church
to help other people where to sit or go Bible study and stuff. And
also do missionary.
 
It has NOTHING to do with Jesus. Jews and Buddhists often live longer than Christians and they don't believe in Jesus.
 
Sorry, I don't believe that article. I disagree there. My parents are not religous and they are generally healthy for their age and they don't look old. Religon has nothing to do with health in my opinion except they don't allow soda pop, beer, etc but that doesn't stop non religous people from being healthy. Non religous people can be as healthy as any religous people. They all have different thoughts about their life.
 
Sorry, I don't believe that article. I disagree there. My parents are not religous and they are generally healthy for their age and they don't look old. Religon has nothing to do with health in my opinion except they don't allow soda pop, beer, etc but that doesn't stop non religous people from being healthy. Non religous people can be as healthy as any religous people. They all have different thoughts about their life.

right on my family is not religious ppl they love ppl they are healthiest ppl i have known

smile
 
Sorry, I don't believe that article. I disagree there. My parents are not religous and they are generally healthy for their age and they don't look old. Religon has nothing to do with health in my opinion except they don't allow soda pop, beer, etc but that doesn't stop non religous people from being healthy. Non religous people can be as healthy as any religous people. They all have different thoughts about their life.

I agree with u but *sigh* will this give those religous fanantics a reason preach on people who are not religous even more? I am tired of people telling me that I need to find God or that my soul will be saved if I find God. I find it annoying!
 
Hmm... I would wonder what would happen if they did research on which types of people were grouchy... religious or non-religious? ;)
 
Well we have Yoga and other Meditate stuff...

Going to Church and singing spiritual and inspirational songs
to make people feel good inside themselves.
One day out of 7 days of hard work and stress at home and work,
when people decide to go to church and release all their stress...

Very good Meditation.... get away from the real harsh world....
and go in God's Holy Temple to find peace...
 
Well really it don't matter how healthy you are & how very religious you are. I've seen people of all varities in excellent health. But one day *BAM* a Heart Attack & dies. Even volient strokes from out of no where. I believe when God says its time. Then its time no matter how healthy you are.
 
sorry i find church really BORED
i rather use my own way like yoga or something
 
Not always.. we have different bodies and how healthy we are or not. It has nothing to do with religion. It depends on each person and how well they can take care of themselves! :thumb:
 
Either religion or non religion does have healtheir lives. But as the study rate, highest rating is religion. Yes, its based on what u eat and drink. " Church is boring", that's depend where you go. There are varies the purpose they go to church, people who think its boring, bec they don't know the purpose by going to church. Many don't come to church to worship. Some come for as a club, or showcase or fear God will punish them and etc the problem is they never experience deeper relationship with God, they are just hearers not doers. True, God expect us to go to His house (church) to be involve fellowship, but the key, God bless those who worship Him in Spirit and Truth. Even songs, think so boring, the reason? Have no clue what's the song is about. Many worship Him church only, but not daily at wherever they go is also the reason why.
 
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