Tobin Erin T, Slatcher Richard B
Department of Psychology.
Health Psychol. 2016 Dec;35(12):1356-1363. doi: 10.1037/hea0000372. Epub 2016 Jun 9.
Multiple aspects of religion have been linked with a variety of physical health outcomes; however, rarely have investigators attempted to empirically test the mechanisms through which religiosity impacts health. The links between religious participation, religious coping, and diurnal cortisol patterns over a 10-year period in a national sample of adults in the United States were investigated.
Participants included 1,470 respondents from the Midlife in the United States (MIDUS) study who provided reports on religious participation, religious coping, and diurnal cortisol.
Religious participation predicted steeper ("healthier") cortisol slopes at the 10-year follow-up, controlling for potential confounds. Further, religious struggle (religious coping marked by tension and strain about religious and spiritual issues) mediated the prospective association between religious participation and cortisol slope, such that greater religious attendance predicted lower levels of religious struggle 10 years later, which in turn was linked with a steeper cortisol slope; this effect remained strong when controlling for general emotional coping and social support. Positive religious coping was unrelated to diurnal cortisol patterns.
These findings identify religious struggle as a mechanism through which religious participation impacts diurnal cortisol levels and suggest that diurnal cortisol is a plausible pathway through which aspects of religion influence long-term physical health. (PsycINFO Database Record
宗教的多个方面已与多种身体健康结果相关联;然而,很少有研究者尝试实证检验宗教信仰影响健康的机制。本研究调查了美国全国成年样本中宗教参与、宗教应对与10年间昼夜皮质醇模式之间的联系。
参与者包括来自美国中年(MIDUS)研究的1470名受访者,他们提供了关于宗教参与、宗教应对和昼夜皮质醇的报告。
在控制潜在混杂因素的情况下,宗教参与在10年随访中预测了更陡(“更健康”)的皮质醇斜率。此外,宗教挣扎(以对宗教和精神问题的紧张和压力为特征的宗教应对)介导了宗教参与和皮质醇斜率之间的前瞻性关联,即更高的宗教出席率预测10年后宗教挣扎水平更低,而这又与更陡的皮质醇斜率相关;在控制一般情绪应对和社会支持时,这种效应仍然很强。积极的宗教应对与昼夜皮质醇模式无关。
这些发现确定宗教挣扎是宗教参与影响昼夜皮质醇水平的一种机制,并表明昼夜皮质醇是宗教方面影响长期身体健康的一个合理途径。(PsycINFO数据库记录)