Publication | Open Access
Religious Involvement, Religious Context, and Self-Assessed Health in Europe
93
Citations
23
References
2011
Year
Religion StudiesReligious InvolvementIndividual Religious AttendanceHealth PromotionReligiositySocial EpidemiologyPsychosocial FactorSocial Determinants Of HealthPublic HealthReligious GroupIndividual Religious InvolvementReligious Attendance
In the present study, the authors examine the extent to which effects of individual religious involvement on self-assessed health are influenced by the religious context (i.e., religious involvement at the country level). The authors test their expectations using individual level data (N = 127,257) on 28 countries from the European Social Surveys (2002-2008). Results of multilevel analyses show that individual religious attendance is positively related to self-assessed health in Europe. Protestants appear to feel healthier than Catholics. Moreover, modeling cross-level interactions demonstrates that religious denominations at the national level are influential: The health advantage of Protestants as compared to Catholics is greater as the percentage of Protestants in a country is higher, yet smaller as countries have a higher percentage of Catholics. The association between religious attendance and self-assessed health does not depend on the national level of religious attendance.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1