Association between Jewish religious observance and mental health among Israeli adults: Findings from the Global Flourishing Study.

IF 1.1 4区 医学 Q4 PSYCHIATRY International Journal of Psychiatry in Medicine Pub Date : 2024-10-24 DOI:10.1177/00912174241296230
Jeff Levin, Matt Bradshaw, Byron R Johnson
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Abstract

Objective: This study investigates the association between Jewish religious observance and several indicators of mental health and psychological well-being among Jewish Israeli adults.

Method: Data are from adult (18+) Jewish respondents in the Israeli sample (N = 2958) of the first wave of the Global Flourishing Study (GFS), a 22-nation population survey which will eventually consist of five annual waves of panel data. The GFS Israeli data were collected via a randomized, stratified, probability-based sampling design, and contained dozens of indicators of sociodemographic, socioeconomic, political, religious, health-related, and other constructs.

Results: Measures of Jewish religious observance, including religious service attendance, prayer, scripture reading, belief in God, and importance of Judaism, are statistically significant predictors of several single-item indicators of mental health (overall mental health, depression, anxiety) and psychological well-being (suffering, happiness, life satisfaction). Greater religious observance is associated with a higher self-rating of overall mental health, less depression and anxiety, less suffering, and greater happiness and life satisfaction. Nearly all results withstood adjusting for effects of several sociodemographic covariates.

Conclusion: These results offer confirmation of prior studies using smaller samples or non-population-based designs and with fewer mental health and religious indicators. They suggest that evidence for a salutary association between religious observance and mental health or psychological well-being among Israeli Jewish adults is consistent with findings in this literature for adherents to other faith traditions throughout the world.

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以色列成年人的犹太宗教信仰与心理健康之间的关系:全球幸福研究的结果。
目的:本研究调查了以色列犹太人的宗教信仰与心理健康和心理幸福感的几项指标之间的关系:本研究调查了以色列成年犹太人的犹太宗教信仰与心理健康和心理幸福感的几项指标之间的关系:数据来自 "全球幸福研究"(GFS)第一波以色列样本(N = 2958)中的成年(18 岁以上)犹太受访者。GFS 以色列数据是通过随机、分层、基于概率的抽样设计收集的,包含数十个社会人口、社会经济、政治、宗教、健康相关和其他方面的指标:对犹太人宗教信仰的测量,包括宗教仪式出席率、祈祷、经文阅读、对上帝的信仰以及犹太教的重要性,在统计学上对心理健康(整体心理健康、抑郁、焦虑)和心理健康(痛苦、幸福、生活满意度)的几个单项指标具有显著的预测作用。更多的宗教信仰与更高的总体心理健康自我评分、更少的抑郁和焦虑、更少的痛苦以及更高的幸福感和生活满意度相关。几乎所有结果都经得起对几个社会人口协变量影响的调整:这些结果证实了之前使用较小样本或非基于人口的设计以及较少心理健康和宗教指标进行的研究。这些结果表明,在以色列犹太成年人中,宗教信仰与心理健康或心理幸福之间存在有益联系的证据与该文献中对世界其他信仰传统信徒的研究结果是一致的。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.00
自引率
5.00%
发文量
55
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: The International Journal of Psychiatry in Medicine (IJPM) bridges the gap between clinical psychiatry research and primary care clinical research. Providing a forum for addressing: The relevance of psychobiological, psychological, social, familial, religious, and cultural factors in the development and treatment of illness; the relationship of biomarkers to psychiatric symptoms and syndromes in primary care...
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