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      Religiousness and depression: Evidence for a main effect and the moderating influence of stressful life events.

      , ,
      Psychological Bulletin
      American Psychological Association (APA)

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          Abstract

          The association between religiousness and depressive symptoms was examined with meta-analytic methods across 147 independent investigations (N = 98,975). Across all studies, the correlation between religiousness and depressive symptoms was -.096, indicating that greater religiousness is mildly associated with fewer symptoms. The results were not moderated by gender, age, or ethnicity, but the religiousness-depression association was stronger in studies involving people who were undergoing stress due to recent life events. The results were also moderated by the type of measure of religiousness used in the study, with extrinsic religious orientation and negative religious coping (e.g., avoiding difficulties through religious activities, blaming God for difficulties) associated with higher levels of depressive symptoms, the opposite direction of the overall findings.

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          Visualization of an Oxygen-deficient Bottom Water Circulation in Osaka Bay, Japan

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            Religion in the home in the 1980s and 1990s: a meta-analytic review and conceptual analysis of links between religion, marriage, and parenting.

            The authors reviewed 94 studies published in journals since 1980 on religion and marital or parental functioning. Meta-analytic techniques were used to quantify religion-family associations examined in at least 3 studies. Greater religiousness appeared to decrease the risk of divorce and facilitate marital functioning, but the effects were small. Greater Christian conservatism was modestly associated with greater endorsement and use of corporal punishment with preadolescents. Isolated findings suggested that greater parental religiousness relates to more positive parenting and better child adjustment. The scope, meaningfulness, and potential strength of findings were restricted because of reliance on global or single-item measures of religious and family domains. To facilitate more conceptually and methodologically sophisticated research, the authors delineated mechanisms by which the substantive and psychosocial elements of religion could benefit or harm family adjustment.
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              Author and article information

              Journal
              Psychological Bulletin
              Psychological Bulletin
              American Psychological Association (APA)
              1939-1455
              0033-2909
              2003
              2003
              : 129
              : 4
              : 614-636
              Article
              10.1037/0033-2909.129.4.614
              12848223
              e1478da4-87d4-4ab4-b8e6-2818aea568e0
              © 2003
              History

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