Hill Terrence D, Ellison Christopher G, Burdette Amy M, Taylor John, Friedman Katherine L
The University of Arizona, School of Sociology, Social Sciences Building, Room 427, 1145 E. South Campus Drive, Tucson, AZ 85721, USA.
University of Texas at San Antonio, Department of Sociology, One UTSA Circle, San Antonio, TX 78249, USA.
Soc Sci Med. 2016 Aug;163:168-75. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2016.04.032. Epub 2016 Apr 28.
Although numerous studies suggest that religious involvement is associated with a wide range of favorable health outcomes, it is unclear whether this general pattern extends to cellular aging. In this paper, we tested whether leukocyte telomere length varies according to several dimensions of religious involvement. We used cross-sectional data from the Nashville Stress and Health Study (2011-2014), a large probability sample of 1252 black and white adults aged 22 to 69 living in Davidson County, TN, USA. Leukocyte telomere length was measured using the monochrome multiplex quantitative polymerase chain reaction method with albumin as the single-copy reference sequence. Dimensions of religious involvement included religiosity, religious support, and religious coping. Our multivariate analyses showed that religiosity (an index of religious attendance, prayer frequency, and religious identity) was positively associated with leukocyte telomere length, even with adjustments for religious support, religious coping, age, gender, race, education, employment status, income, financial strain, stressful life events, marital status, family support, friend support, depressive symptoms, smoking, heavy drinking, and allostatic load. Unlike religiosity, religious support and religious coping were unrelated to leukocyte telomere length across models. Depressive symptoms, smoking, heavy drinking, and allostatic load failed to explain any of the association between religiosity and telomere length. To our knowledge, this is the first population-based study to link religious involvement and cellular aging. Although our data suggest that adults who frequently attend religious services, pray with regularity, and consider themselves to be religious tend to exhibit longer telomeres than those who attend and pray less frequently and do not consider themselves to be religious, additional research is needed to establish the mechanisms underlying this association.
尽管众多研究表明宗教参与与广泛的良好健康结果相关,但尚不清楚这一普遍模式是否适用于细胞衰老。在本文中,我们测试了白细胞端粒长度是否会根据宗教参与的几个维度而有所不同。我们使用了来自纳什维尔压力与健康研究(2011 - 2014年)的横断面数据,该研究是对居住在美国田纳西州戴维森县的1252名年龄在22至69岁之间的黑人和白人成年人进行的大样本概率抽样。使用以白蛋白作为单拷贝参考序列的单色多重定量聚合酶链反应方法测量白细胞端粒长度。宗教参与的维度包括宗教虔诚度、宗教支持和宗教应对方式。我们的多变量分析表明,宗教虔诚度(宗教出席率、祈祷频率和宗教身份的综合指标)与白细胞端粒长度呈正相关,即使在对宗教支持、宗教应对方式、年龄、性别、种族、教育程度、就业状况、收入、经济压力、压力性生活事件、婚姻状况、家庭支持、朋友支持、抑郁症状、吸烟、酗酒和应激负荷进行调整之后也是如此。与宗教虔诚度不同,宗教支持和宗教应对方式在所有模型中均与白细胞端粒长度无关。抑郁症状、吸烟、酗酒和应激负荷无法解释宗教虔诚度与端粒长度之间的任何关联。据我们所知,这是第一项基于人群的将宗教参与与细胞衰老联系起来的研究。尽管我们的数据表明,经常参加宗教仪式、定期祈祷且自认为有宗教信仰的成年人往往比那些参加宗教活动和祈祷较少且不认为自己有宗教信仰的成年人表现出更长的端粒,但仍需要进一步的研究来确定这种关联背后的机制。