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The link between religion and mental health may be due to the guiding framework or social support that it offers to individuals. [37] By these routes, religion has the potential to offer security and significance in life, as well as valuable human relationships, to foster mental health.
Critiques and evaluations of the MMRS or BMMRS have appeared in the Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease, [3] Research on Aging, [4] [5] the Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion, [6] the International Journal for the Psychology of Religion, [7] [8] Journal of Religion and Health, [9] [10] Research in the Social Scientific Study of ...
The book's 34th and final chapter contains a 77-page table with systematic information about all 20th-century studies of religion and health. Topics are arranged in the order of the other chapters, and provide technical information such as the type of population, the number of subjects, the existence of a control or a comparison group, and a 1 ...
[22] [23] He cites extensive studies to show that there is little or no evidence that religion ever causes mental disorders, [24] and that overall religion is a positive contributor to mental health. He specifically addresses and rebuts the claim that religious belief is a delusion .
The examples that relate to Israel, notes the AJC, are for some “the most controversial.” But they are intended, it notes, “to explain where and how anti-Israel animus can become a form of ...
This book is also appropriate for use in courses on the psychology of religion. My students have responded positively to Pargament's careful exposition of his theory, the support he offers in examples from his research and clinical practice, and his engaging use of metaphor. (pp. 368–369 [3])
Spirituality affects both mental and physical health outcomes in the general United States population across different ethnic groups. [1] Because of the nuanced definitions of spirituality and religiosity, the literature on spirituality is not consistent in definitions or measures resulting in a lack of coherence.
Kenneth Pargament is noted for his book Psychology of Religion and Coping (1997), [32] as well as for a 2007 book on religion and psychotherapy, and a sustained research program on religious coping. He is professor of psychology at Bowling Green State University ( Ohio , US ), and has published more than 100 papers on the subject of religion ...