Speed David
Department of Psychology, University of New Brunswick, Saint John, NB, E2L 4L5, Canada.
J Relig Health. 2018 Feb;57(1):366-383. doi: 10.1007/s10943-017-0493-y.
Some health research suggests that religious and spiritual variables positively predict health-screening behaviours. However, much of the literature on this topic has utilized exclusively religious samples, or has sampled from populations without uniform access to health care. Either of these issues may have artificially inflated the relationship between religion/spirituality and health-screening behaviours. The current study used data from the 2012 Canadian Community Health Survey to examine a general sample of women from New Brunswick and Manitoba (N > 1200). Results indicated that lower levels of church attendance were positive predictors of papanicolaou tests and mammograms, while higher levels of attendance were generally associated with poorer screening behaviours. Religiosity was a uniformly non-significant predictor of screening behaviours. Finally, religious affiliation was inconsistently related to screening behaviours, but tended to favour religious non-affiliation when it was. Religion/spirituality does not appear to have a uniformly positive nor linear effect in predicting health-screening behaviours in women.
一些健康研究表明,宗教和精神变量能积极预测健康筛查行为。然而,关于这一主题的许多文献仅使用了宗教样本,或者是从无法平等获得医疗保健的人群中抽样。这两个问题中的任何一个都可能人为地夸大了宗教/精神信仰与健康筛查行为之间的关系。本研究使用了2012年加拿大社区健康调查的数据,对来自新不伦瑞克省和曼尼托巴省的女性总体样本(N>1200)进行了调查。结果表明,较低的教堂礼拜出席率是巴氏涂片检查和乳房X光检查的积极预测因素,而较高的出席率通常与较差的筛查行为相关。宗教虔诚度在筛查行为方面始终是一个不显著的预测因素。最后,宗教归属与筛查行为的关系并不一致,但在相关时往往有利于无宗教归属。宗教/精神信仰在预测女性健康筛查行为方面似乎并没有始终如一的积极或线性影响。