Krause Neal, Liang Jersey, Shaw Benjamin A, Sugisawa Hidehiro, Kim Hye-Kyung, Sugihara Yoko
School of Public Health and Institute of Gerontology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor 48109-2029, USA.
J Gerontol B Psychol Sci Soc Sci. 2002 Mar;57(2):S96-S107. doi: 10.1093/geronb/57.2.s96.
To see whether three dimensions of religion (private religious practices, religious coping, and belief in the afterlife) buffer the effect of the death of a significant other on change in self-reported hypertension over time.
Interviews were conducted with a nationally representative sample of people aged 60 and older in Japan at two points in time, 1996 and 1999. Complete data were available on 1,723 older Japanese. Respondents were asked a series of questions about their religious beliefs and practices, whether a family member or close friend had died in the past year, and whether they had hypertension.
The data suggest that older adults in Japan who experienced the death of a loved one but who believed in a good afterlife were less likely to report they had hypertension at the follow-up interview than elderly people in Japan who lost a close other but did not believe in a good afterlife.
The results suggest how one overlooked dimension of religion (i.e., religious beliefs) may bolster the health of older people in the face of adversity.
探究宗教的三个维度(个人宗教活动、宗教应对方式以及对来世的信仰)是否能缓冲重要他人的死亡对随时间推移自我报告的高血压变化的影响。
在1996年和1999年两个时间点,对日本全国具有代表性的60岁及以上人群样本进行访谈。共有1723名日本老年人提供了完整数据。受访者被问及一系列关于他们宗教信仰和活动的问题、过去一年是否有家庭成员或密友去世以及他们是否患有高血压。
数据表明,在日本,经历了亲人死亡但相信美好来世的老年人,在后续访谈中报告患有高血压的可能性低于失去亲人但不相信美好来世的日本老年人。
结果表明宗教中一个被忽视的维度(即宗教信仰)如何在面对逆境时增强老年人的健康。