Najman J M, Williams G M, Keeping J D, Morrison J, Andersen M J
University of Queensland, St Lucia.
Soc Sci Med. 1988;26(4):401-7. doi: 10.1016/0277-9536(88)90308-5.
In this report 6566 women enrolled in the Mater-University of Queensland Study of Pregnancy (MUSP) were separated into three groups; members of religious sects, Christians who attend church frequently and Christians who are infrequent attenders. These three groups, respectively labelled Christian sects, Christian attenders and lukewarm Christians were compared on a number of social background, lifestyle and pregnancy outcome variables. The sect members appeared to have the most favourable health, lifestyles and healthy babies at delivery, though this latter finding appears attributable to specific characteristics of the mother and her lifestyle. On most measures the children of lukewarm Christians appear to manifest the worst health while Christian attenders form a group whose children's health is between that of sect members and lukewarm Christians.
在本报告中,昆士兰大学孕产妇妊娠研究(MUSP)招募的6566名女性被分为三组:宗教教派成员、经常去教堂的基督徒和不经常去教堂的基督徒。这三组分别标记为基督教教派、常去教堂的基督徒和不热心的基督徒,就一些社会背景、生活方式和妊娠结局变量进行了比较。教派成员在分娩时似乎拥有最有利的健康状况、生活方式和健康的婴儿,不过后一个发现似乎归因于母亲的特定特征及其生活方式。在大多数指标上,不热心的基督徒的孩子似乎健康状况最差,而常去教堂的基督徒的孩子健康状况处于教派成员和不热心的基督徒的孩子之间。