Health & Medicine - Posted by Timothy Wall-Missouri on Wednesday, August 22, 2012 10:01 - 5 Comments
Make room for faith in healthcare, study says

Study author Dan Cohen says spirituality may help people’s mental health by reducing their self-centeredness and developing their sense of belonging to a larger whole. Many different faith traditions encourage spirituality though they use different names for the process. (Credit: iStockphoto)
U. MISSOURI (US) — Despite differences in rituals and beliefs among the world’s major religions, a new study shows that spirituality often enhances health regardless of a person’s faith.
Researchers from the University of Missouri say that health care providers could take advantage of this correlation between health—particularly mental health—and spirituality by tailoring treatments and rehabilitation programs to accommodate an individual’s spiritual inclinations.
“In many ways, the results of our study support the idea that spirituality functions as a personality trait,” says Dan Cohen, assistant teaching professor of religious studies and one of the co-authors of the study.
“With increased spirituality people reduce their sense of self and feel a greater sense of oneness and connectedness with the rest of the universe.
“What was interesting was that frequency of participation in religious activities or the perceived degree of congregational support was not found to be significant in the relationships between personality, spirituality, religion, and health.”
The study used the results of three surveys to determine if correlations existed among participants’ self-reported mental and physical health, personality factors, and spirituality in Buddhists, Muslims, Jews, Catholics, and Protestants.
Across all five faiths, a greater degree of spirituality was related to better mental health, specifically lower levels of neuroticism and greater extraversion. Forgiveness was the only spiritual trait predictive of mental health after personality variables were considered.
“Our prior research shows that the mental health of people recovering from different medical conditions, such as cancer, stroke, spinal cord injury, and traumatic brain injury, appears to be related significantly to positive spiritual beliefs and especially congregational support and spiritual interventions,” says Cohen.
“Spiritual beliefs may be a coping device to help individuals deal emotionally with stress.”
Part of the whole
Cohen believes spirituality may help people’s mental health by reducing their self-centeredness and developing their sense of belonging to a larger whole. Many different faith traditions encourage spirituality though they use different names for the process.
A Christian monk wouldn’t say he had attained Nirvana, nor would a Buddhist monk say he had communed with Jesus Christ, but they may well be referring to similar phenomena.
“Health workers may also benefit from learning how to minimize the negative side of a patient’s spirituality, which may manifest itself in the tendency to view misfortune as a divine curse.”
As the authors note, spiritual interventions such as religious-based counseling, meditation, and forgiveness protocols may enhance spiritually based beliefs, practices, and coping strategies in positive ways.
The benefits of a more spiritual personality may go beyond an individual’s mental health. Cohen believes that the selflessness that comes with spirituality enhances characteristics that are important for fostering a global society based on the virtues of peace and cooperation.
The paper is published in the Journal of Religion and Health.
The lead author is Brick Johnstone, and additional authors are Dong Yoon of the School of Social Work, Laura Schopp of the Department of Health Psychology, Guy McCormack now at Samuel Merritt University, Marian L. Smith now of Via Cristi Hospital, and James Campbell of the School of Medicine. Dan Cohen is affiliated with the Religious Studies Department in the College of Arts and Science.
Source: University of Missouri
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5 Comments
F Trudeau
No control group composed of atheists?
Thanks for your attempt to explain this to the people. It a great help!Thanks for this one
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Charisse Oland
As a seasoned healthcare executive and doctoral candidate researching how to enhance spirituality in a secular hospital, this conclusion mirror’s my preliminary findings. Although I haven’t yet been able to access the whole article, the summarized results you shared parallel theories by Erich Fromm, psychoanalyst and sociologist from the 1950′s. His premise is that our ability to love others as well as self is essential to human existence, distinguishing us from other species. Love, including our spiritual nature and not simply religious beliefs, stems from our shared human need to transcend ourselves and become part of a greater whole. Thank you for this affirmation.
Great article..! I am a firm believer in spirituality .Faith does things which none of us can even wonder. I have witnessed a person get cured of a stage 4 Leukemia without any medical treatment.The doctors had given Michelle (She happens to be my mom’s best friend) 4-5 months time. She was bed ridden and at the final stage of cancer as everyone knows,there is barely a chance to survive but call it a miracle she is still alive and healthy and there seems to be no evidence as to prove that she ever suffered from Leukemia. Her doctors were stunned.They had no answer to what had happened. This little development had defied all the logic and science. I am not much into spirituality and all that stuff and even I find it hard to believe it. Michelle wasn’t gonna give up her life so easily.She clung onto it with all the faith she had in an unknown power perhaps.This was about 6 years ago.Michelle now lives happily with her loving husband and kids and grand kids who all supported her through her tough days. I don’t have a clue as to how such a turn in her life came by but I’m glad for her.
























So if we simply believed that our intelligence has evolved from intelligent systems that continually evolve in the universe, would that fill the bill a bit of belonging to that larger universal hole?