DuBois James M, Chin Eu Gene, Solomon Erin D, Harris Jenine K, Hill Peter, Baldwin Kari, Baker Lauren L
Division of General Medicine and Geriatrics, Washington University in St. Louis, St. Louis, MO, United States.
Rosemead School of Psychology, Biola University, La Mirada, CA, United States.
Front Genet. 2025 Jun 4;16:1587774. doi: 10.3389/fgene.2025.1587774. eCollection 2025.
Religious affiliation and attendance at services is associated with lower levels of support for some genomic activities, such as genetic testing. However, little is known about why or how religion shapes attitudes toward genomics.
We conducted a cross-sectional survey with 4,939 participants representative of nine religious groups in the US (including atheist and agnostic). The survey examined (a) attitudes toward diverse activities associated with genomic medicine, (b) religious beliefs and practices, (c) control variables including trust in the healthcare system and knowledge of genetics, and (d) demographics. We examined differences between groups using an Analysis of Covariance (ANCOVA), and developed a regression model to identify significant predictors of support for genetic medicine.
When controlling for demographic variables, only small attitudinal differences existed between religious groups, though substantial variability existed within groups. Only seven variables uniquely predicted attitudes toward genomic medicine: acceptance of evolution, support for promoting community health within their spiritual community, knowledge of genetics, more permissive attitudes toward reproduction and end of life care within their spiritual community, distrust in the healthcare system, political orientation, and frequency of volunteering (in descending order).
Our findings suggest that stereotyping based on religious affiliation is seriously misguided, and engagement with religious groups on genomic medicine must go beyond education and address moral issues and worldviews.
宗教信仰和参加宗教活动与对某些基因组活动(如基因检测)的支持程度较低有关。然而,关于宗教如何以及为何塑造人们对基因组学的态度,我们知之甚少。
我们对4939名参与者进行了横断面调查,这些参与者代表了美国的九个宗教团体(包括无神论者和不可知论者)。该调查考察了:(a)对与基因组医学相关的各种活动的态度;(b)宗教信仰和实践;(c)控制变量,包括对医疗保健系统的信任和遗传学知识;以及(d)人口统计学特征。我们使用协方差分析(ANCOVA)来检验不同组之间的差异,并建立了一个回归模型来确定支持基因医学的显著预测因素。
在控制人口统计学变量后,宗教团体之间仅存在微小的态度差异,尽管组内存在很大的变异性。只有七个变量独特地预测了对基因组医学的态度:对进化论的接受程度、在其宗教社区内对促进社区健康的支持、遗传学知识、在其宗教社区内对生殖和临终关怀更为宽容的态度、对医疗保健系统的不信任、政治倾向以及志愿服务频率(按降序排列)。
我们的研究结果表明,基于宗教信仰的刻板印象严重误导,在基因组医学方面与宗教团体的接触必须超越教育范畴,还要解决道德问题和世界观问题。