Department of Social Sciences, University of Houston-Downtown, One Main Street, N1067, Houston, TX, 77002-1014, USA,
J Relig Health. 2014 Oct;53(5):1427-39. doi: 10.1007/s10943-013-9763-5.
This investigation examines the influence of religious involvement on likelihood of verifying previously reported disability, net of current activity difficulty and self-rated health. It compares African American and white community-dwelling adults confirming (N = 348) and not confirming (N = 164) activity limitations. Logistic regressions show service attendance negatively associated with disability perception only among African Americans. For whites, use of beliefs in coping mitigates against confirmation of disability. Observed associations are conditioned by socioeconomic status and gender. These results underscore the importance of social context, as well as multidimensional religiosity, in understanding the health and disability implications of religiousness.
本研究考察了宗教参与对先前报告的残疾可能性的影响,控制了当前活动难度和自我评估健康状况。它比较了确认(N=348)和未确认(N=164)活动限制的非裔美国人和白人社区居住成年人。逻辑回归显示,在非裔美国人中,服务出席与残疾认知呈负相关。对于白人来说,应对信念的使用可以减轻对残疾的确认。观察到的关联受到社会经济地位和性别条件的限制。这些结果强调了社会背景以及宗教的多维性在理解宗教对健康和残疾的影响方面的重要性。