Attend Religious Services, Live Longer
Study Shows Regular Attendance at Religious Services Cuts Risk of Death
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Interactive Eye on Religion Find out more about the beliefs, practices and history of some of the world's major religions.
A new study shows that older women who regularly attend religious services
reduce their risk of death by 20%. The study was published in Psychology and Health.
Researchers from Yeshiva University's Albert Einstein College of Medicine
grouped all religions together, looking only at whether the women attended
services regularly and whether those services brought them comfort.
Organized religion creates a social network with regular routines, which is
known to enhance well-being. However, even when researchers adjusted for that
factor, the women going to services were still less likely to die.
"Interestingly, the protection against mortality provided by religion cannot be entirely explained by expected factors that include enhanced social support of friends or family, lifestyle choices, and reduced smoking and alcohol consumption," lead author and clinical assistant professor of psychology Eliezer Schnall says in a news release. "There is something here that we don't quite understand. It is always possible that some unknown or unmeasured factors confounded these results."
Researchers evaluated 92,395 postmenopausal women participating in the Women's Health Initiative Observational Study, a national, multi-ethnic, long-term study aimed at addressing women's health issues funded by the National Institutes of Health. The women, all between the ages of 50 and 79,
answered questions about their behaviors, health, and religious practices.
Researchers followed participants for an average of 7.7 years and made adjustments for known risk factors, such as age and health history, when evaluating risk of death. They found that women attending religious services at least once per week showed a 20% mortality risk reduction compared to those not attending services at all.
In addition to looking at mortality broadly, researchers examined the risk
of death from cardiovascular disease. They did not find that religion had an
impact on the women's risk of death by this particular cause.
By Caroline Wilbert
Reviewed by Elizabeth Klodas
©2005-2008 WebMD, LLC. All rights reserved.
- If church is the place where our focus is on God, not on ourselves, and on how we can help others, then I believe we will live more purposeful, fulfilled lives. This is not so much because of what happens in church alone as much as what happens outside of church because of what can or should happen inside of church.
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mikespeir
timothyone;
I agree with both posts,,well said, both of you....
Church will only give you a false hope, and a false sense of security.- Reply to this comment
- This makes perfect sense, as church can be a place where one can find comfort, peace, and purpose in the midst of our busy lives.
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- Thanks cwbhyt, spoken like a true moral hypocrite of your ilk.
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- After the reading of his father''s will, Bill said "Thank God". Later he told his wife he thought the family needed to begin attending church again to show thanks to God for his blessings. His brother Bob, who was left out of the will, remains embittered and sleeps in on Sundays. At the mission.
Attending church can''t extend life, but being able to afford fruits, vegetables, good medical care and gym memberships can. Ever seen an impoverished black child at the health club? How often do our poorest get a bag of fruit at home, that is, compared to the children of the affluent? Is there anything more stressful than living in poverty?
Church is just another part of the good life, the part where the wealthy ask God to continues to "bless" them. The poor who attend faithfully die in need of health care and decent nutrition like all the rest.
Why blame those who live in crippling despair with parents who have been sickened by lives of despair, whose parents and grandparents lived equally desperate lives? When they eat McDonald''s grease, and develop other unhealthy habits, we can only blame the society that put them and kept them in that environment while others are allowed to hoard 1000 times more than anyone could possibly ever use, and then do everything possible to put their faces and money on television, creating more stress and anger for the cheated poor.
jamesbrown4ever@gmail.com - Reply to this comment
- This works only for the guilty looking to for relief.
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- No thanks. If I kick off a year or two earlier, so be it. I wasted too many years trying to believe what I was increasingly finding unbelievable. No more!
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- My mom is not in good enough health to go to church anymore, even though she attended regularly. I imagine that a lot of older ladies aren''t in good enough health although they''d like to go to church. So this might be an unscientific study with an agenda.
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- DIe you stupid atheists! Hell awaits!!
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- I agree with many of the posts. As a skeptic in the areas of "god" and religion, if something may bring any positives despite the inability of the believers to prove their god''s existence on an imperical or any level I hope they may find happiness and joy in whatever way they can. Personally I do not belive in the invisible cloud beings Christians, Hebrews, and Muslims do, yet it is not my job to make anyone believe in what I do, and why should I?
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- Let''s get serious, OK? One''s risk of death is 100%! Irregardless of one''s beleif in supernatural foolishness, everyone''s life is going to end. As to the "comfort" entry, religion is an opiate to the masses...something which makes one feel good about themselves for a short time, then fades. I found the final entry about cardiovascular disease impact at 0% especially telling. Apparently all the prayer and supplication has NOTHING to do with bodily healing. Nothing fails like prayer. What a "lame" article!
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- Give me a break!!!!! Who thought this ignorance up Pat Robertson?????
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- Maybe some feel that spending one''s life as an intellectually-enslaved drone is worth a few extra months on the planet - I sure don''t.
As Emiliano Zapata put it, "It is better to die standing than live on one''s knees".... - Reply to this comment
- bottom line, no one gets out of this life alive. does not matter if you are poor, rich, attractive, unattractive, of any race, educated, uneducated, and etc. sooner or later, all must die. too bad the author of the article, caroline wilbert, does not provide a link to the complete published study so one can review the selection of participants, relevant history, diet, exercise, other measurements used in this study. still, we all must die just as every living creature must die.
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- I appreciate what this article is trying to do, but I really don''t believe that this is necessarily the case. I know just way too many people (women)who faithfully attended religious services of one kind or another all of their lives, and still they got gravely sick and died long before they reached their golden years. Of course, I know many who have also lived long healthy lives. However, I think these studies sometimes take the easy way in looking at research groups and don''t truly reflect reality.
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- Nope ... Thats foolish. ..Do you need some one to hold you? LOL...
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- I guess if you refuse to accept the fact,through arrogance or fear,that we are not that important when you can bring yourself to look at the gigantic picture from the cosmos all the way down to the sub-atomic level. Get over it ,you live then die and god doesnt give a !@#$ about you. Now that is true liberation!!!!
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