Program on Medicine and Religion, The University of Chicago, Chicago, IL, USA,
J Relig Health. 2013 Dec;52(4):1333-45. doi: 10.1007/s10943-012-9620-y.
Both theory and data suggest that religions shape the way individuals interpret and seek help for their illnesses. Yet, health disparities research has rarely examined the influence of a shared religion on the health of individuals from distinct minority communities. In this paper, we focus on Islam and American Muslims to outline the ways in which a shared religion may impact the health of a racially, ethnically, and socioeconomically diverse minority community. We use Kleinman's "cultural construction of clinical reality" as a theoretical framework to interpret the extant literature on American Muslim health. We then propose a research agenda that would extend current disparities research to include measures of religiosity, particularly among populations that share a minority religious affiliation. The research we propose would provide a fuller understanding of the relationships between religion and health among Muslim Americans and other minority communities and would thereby undergird efforts to reduce unwarranted health disparities.
理论和数据都表明,宗教影响着个人对疾病的理解和寻求治疗的方式。然而,健康差异研究很少考察共同的宗教信仰对来自不同少数民族社区的个人健康的影响。在本文中,我们专注于伊斯兰教和美国穆斯林,概述共同的宗教信仰可能会以何种方式影响一个在种族、民族和社会经济方面多样化的少数民族社区的健康。我们使用克莱因曼的“临床现实的文化构建”作为理论框架来解释关于美国穆斯林健康的现有文献。然后,我们提出了一个研究议程,该议程将把目前的差异研究扩展到包括宗教信仰的衡量标准,特别是在那些具有少数民族宗教信仰的人群中。我们提议的研究将更全面地了解穆斯林美国人和其他少数民族社区中宗教与健康之间的关系,并为减少不必要的健康差异提供支持。