Zimmer Zachary, Jagger Carol, Chiu Chi-Tsun, Ofstedal Mary Beth, Rojo Florencia, Saito Yasuhiko
University of California, San Francisco, USA.
Mount Saint Vincent University, Canada.
SSM Popul Health. 2016 May 10;2:373-381. doi: 10.1016/j.ssmph.2016.04.009. eCollection 2016 Dec.
Persistent population aging worldwide is focusing attention on modifiable factors that can improve later life health. There is evidence that religiosity and spirituality are among such factors. Older people tend to have high rates of involvement in religious and/or spiritual endeavors and it is possible that population aging will be associated with increasing prevalence of religious and spiritual activity worldwide. Despite increasing research on religiosity, spirituality and health among older persons, population aging worldwide suggests the need for a globally integrated approach. As a step toward this, we review a subset of the literature on the impact of religiosity and spirituality on health in later life. We find that much of this has looked at the relationship between religiosity/spirituality and longevity as well as physical and mental health. Mechanisms include social support, health behaviors, stress and psychosocial factors. We identify a number of gaps in current knowledge. Many previous studies have taken place in the U.S. and Europe. Much data is cross-sectional, limiting ability to make causal inference. Religiosity and spirituality can be difficult to define and distinguish and the two concepts are often considered together, though on balance religiosity has received more attention than spirituality. The latter may however be equally important. Although there is evidence that religiosity is associated with longer life and better physical and mental health, these outcomes have been investigated separately rather than together such as in measures of health expectancy. In conclusion, there is a need for a unified and nuanced approach to understanding how religiosity and spirituality impact on health and longevity within a context of global aging, in particular whether they result in longer healthy life rather than just longer life.
全球人口老龄化问题持续存在,这使得人们将注意力集中在那些能够改善晚年健康状况的可改变因素上。有证据表明,宗教信仰和精神追求属于此类因素。老年人参与宗教和/或精神活动的比例往往较高,而且全球人口老龄化可能会导致宗教和精神活动在世界范围内的普及程度不断提高。尽管针对老年人宗教信仰、精神追求与健康之间的研究日益增多,但全球人口老龄化现象表明,需要采取一种全球一体化的研究方法。作为迈向这一目标的一步,我们回顾了一部分关于宗教信仰和精神追求对晚年健康影响的文献。我们发现,其中大部分研究关注的是宗教信仰/精神追求与长寿以及身心健康之间的关系。其作用机制包括社会支持、健康行为、压力和心理社会因素等。我们发现了当前知识体系中的一些空白。许多以往的研究是在美国和欧洲进行的。大量数据是横断面数据,这限制了进行因果推断的能力。宗教信仰和精神追求可能难以界定和区分,这两个概念常常被放在一起考虑,不过总体而言,宗教信仰受到的关注比精神追求更多。然而,后者可能同样重要。尽管有证据表明宗教信仰与更长的寿命以及更好的身心健康相关,但这些结果是分别进行研究的,而非像在健康预期寿命测量中那样综合起来研究。总之,需要一种统一且细致入微的方法,来理解在全球老龄化背景下宗教信仰和精神追求如何影响健康和长寿,特别是它们是否能带来更长的健康寿命,而不仅仅是更长的寿命。