Speed David, Barry Caitlin, Cragun Ryan
Department of Psychology, PO Box 5050, University of New Brunswick, Saint John, New Brunswick, E2L 4L5, Canada.
University of New Brunswick, Saint John, New Brunswick, Canada; Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario, Canada.
Soc Sci Med. 2020 Nov;265:113387. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2020.113387. Epub 2020 Sep 24.
Higher levels of religion and spirituality (R/S) are associated with better health in both Canadian and American samples. One mechanism that can account forthis relationship is social support, which is positively associated with higher R/S and is positively associated with overall wellness. Although social support has been found to mediate the relationship between R/S and health in American samples, parallel research on Canadian samples is lacking.
While having cultural similarities, Canada and the United States have noteworthy differences with respect to religion, politics, and demographics. Consequently, it is problematic to assume that social support accounts for the R/Shealth relationship for Canadians. The goal of the current study was to explore whether social support mediated the relationship between R/S and health outcomes.
Using individuals ≥20 years of age from the 2012 Canadian Community Health Survey - Mental Health component (N ≥ 9043), we isolated people who had either the lowest or highest possible score on a composite measure of R/S. We then compared 'minimal R/S' respondents to 'maximal R/S' respondents on 11 health outcomes and investigated if these health disparities attenuated when accounting for differences in social support.
Maximal R/S was associated with better health for nine of the tested outcomes, but seven of these relationships were attenuated when social support was added to the model. The two remaining outcomes, drug abuse/dependence and alcohol abuse/dependence, were not significantly impacted by the inclusion of social support.
Social support plays a mediating role in many R/S-health relationships for Canadians. Although R/S appears to have a statistical relationship with many health outcomes, several of these lack practical significance.
在加拿大和美国的样本中,较高水平的宗教信仰和精神寄托(R/S)与更好的健康状况相关。可以解释这种关系的一种机制是社会支持,它与较高的R/S呈正相关,且与整体健康状况呈正相关。尽管在美国样本中已发现社会支持可调节R/S与健康之间的关系,但缺乏对加拿大样本的类似研究。
加拿大和美国虽然有文化上的相似之处,但在宗教、政治和人口统计学方面存在显著差异。因此,假设社会支持能解释加拿大人的R/S与健康之间的关系是有问题的。本研究的目的是探讨社会支持是否介导了R/S与健康结果之间的关系。
我们从2012年加拿大社区健康调查-心理健康部分中选取年龄≥20岁的个体(N≥9043),分离出在R/S综合测量中得分最低或最高的人群。然后,我们在11项健康结果方面比较了“最低R/S”受访者与“最高R/S”受访者,并研究在考虑社会支持差异时,这些健康差异是否会减弱。
在测试的11项结果中,有9项显示最高R/S与更好的健康状况相关,但当将社会支持纳入模型时,其中7项关系减弱。其余两项结果,即药物滥用/依赖和酒精滥用/依赖,在纳入社会支持后未受到显著影响。
社会支持在加拿大人的许多R/S与健康的关系中起中介作用。尽管R/S似乎与许多健康结果存在统计学关系,但其中一些缺乏实际意义。