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Religion among Disabled and Nondisabled Persons II: Attendance at Religious Services as a Predictor of the Course of Disability
306
Citations
27
References
1997
Year
DisabilityReligiosityReligious PrejudiceReligion StudiesReligious InvolvementNondisabled Persons IiReligious Identity StudiesDisability StudyPublic HealthReligious GroupBetter FunctioningRehabilitationPsychosocial ResearchDisability AwarenessHealth BehaviorSpiritualityReligious ServicesMedicineReligious Participation
Does religious involvement influence changes in physical health? We perform a longitudinal analysis of the effect of religious participation on functioning over a 12-year follow-up period, in a large, prospective, representative sample of elderly persons from New Haven, Connecticut, a religiously diverse community. To examine the possibility that disability or changes in disability may be affecting religious involvement, we perform a second longitudinal analysis of changes in religious practices. Finally, we ask whether psychosocial correlates explain the effect of religious involvement on disability. Findings are (a) that attendance at services is a strong predictor of better functioning, even when intermediate changes in functioning are included, (b) that health practices, social ties, and indicators of well-being reduce, but do not eliminate these effects, and (c) that disability has minimal effects on subsequent attendance. The findings illustrate the short- and long-term importance of religious participation to the health and well-being of elderly people, and suggest a particular significance for religious participation in the lives of disabled elders.
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