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Spirituality and depression: a look at the evidence.

Publication: Southern Medical Journal
Publication Date: 01-JUL-07
Format: Online
Delivery: Immediate Online Access
Full Article Title: Spirituality and depression: a look at the evidence.(Special Section: Spirituality/Medicine Interface Project)

Article Excerpt
Depression is one of the strongest predictors of suicide, especially when accompanied by hopelessness. (1) People often commit suicide when they perceive that there is no way out of an intolerably painful situation, or when they see no purpose or meaning to a life of seemingly unending suffering. Depressive illness can itself make people feel this way, and depression is very common among patients for whom medical clinicians care. Studies of medical inpatients have reported rates of depression approximating 50%. (2)

When patients are asked how they are able to manage with the stress of medical illness, disability, and pain, they frequently report that religious beliefs and practices are a source of comfort and strength. (3) Religious beliefs can be a source of hope for those facing difficult life problems, especially medical illness, and it is not surprising that religious activity is positively related to hope and optimism (4) and negatively related to depression. (5)

I review here some of the research that has demonstrated a relationship between religion/spirituality and depression in patients with physical illness. When medical patients are asked what they are doing that enables them to cope, in some areas of the country nearly 90% of hospitalized patients report that religion is a helpful resource, and 40% indicate that religion is the most important factor that keeps them going. (6) In a study of unconventional therapies for pain among a random sample of 382 persons with musculoskeletal complaints in San Diego, California, the most commonly mentioned therapy was prayer, which was also rated the second most helpful of 19 therapies examined. (7) Likewise, in a study of 100 patients on the day before cardiac surgery at the University of Alabama Medical Center in Birmingham, 95% reported using prayer and 70% rated prayer as "extremely helpful" for coping with surgery (ie, gave prayer a score of 15 on a 0-15 helpfulness scale). (8) Thus, according to patients themselves, religious practices facilitate adaptation to illness.

However, just because patients report that religion is helpful does not mean that such is actually the case. Many...

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