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  Vol. 7 No. 2, March 1998 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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Religious Commitment and Health Status

A Review of the Research and Implications for Family Medicine

Dale A. Matthews, MD; Michael E. McCullough, PhD; David B. Larson, MD, MSPH; Harold G. Koenig, MD, MHSc; James P. Swyers, MA; Mary Greenwold Milano

Arch Fam Med. 1998;7:118-124.

The empirical literature from epidemiological and clinical studies regarding the relationship between religious factors (eg, frequency of religious attendance, private religious involvement, and relying on one's religious beliefs as a source of strength and coping) and physical and mental health status in the areas of prevention, coping, and recovery was reviewed. Empirical studies from the published literature that contained at least 1 measure of subjects' religious commitment and at least 1 measure of their physical or mental health status were used. In particular, studies that examined the role of religious commitment or religious involvement in the prevention of illness, coping with illnesses that have already arisen, and recovery from illness were highlighted. A large proportion of published empirical data suggest that religious commitment may play a beneficial role in preventing mental and physical illness, improving how people cope with mental and physical illness, and facilitating recovery from illness. However, much still remains to be investigated with improved studies that are specially designed to investigate the connection between religious involvement and health status. Nevertheless, the available data suggest that practitioners who make several small changes in how patients' religious commitments are broached in clinical practice may enhance health care outcomes.


From the Division of Internal Medicine, Georgetown University School of Medicine, Washington, DC (Dr Matthews); the National Institute for Healthcare Research, Rockville, Md (Drs McCullough and Larson and Ms Milano); the Departments of Psychiatry, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC (Drs Larson and Koenig), and Northwestern University Medical School, Chicago, Ill (Dr Larson); and James P. Swyers Enterprises, Takoma Park, Md (Mr Swyers).


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