1994
DOI: 10.1176/ps.45.3.225
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Religious Practices and Alcoholism in a Southern Adult Population

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Cited by 71 publications
(60 citation statements)
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“…[83][84] The psychopathological symptoms that apparently benefitted from spiritual and/or religious involvement, included: depression 10 ; suicidality 85 ; anxiety; and substance abuse. [86][87][88] Explanations for the positive influence of spirituality and/or religion, included that religious belief provides a positive worldview which gives experiences meaning and which also acts as an agent of social control.…”
Section: Reality Of Spirituality and Religion For Practitioners And Umentioning
confidence: 99%
“…[83][84] The psychopathological symptoms that apparently benefitted from spiritual and/or religious involvement, included: depression 10 ; suicidality 85 ; anxiety; and substance abuse. [86][87][88] Explanations for the positive influence of spirituality and/or religion, included that religious belief provides a positive worldview which gives experiences meaning and which also acts as an agent of social control.…”
Section: Reality Of Spirituality and Religion For Practitioners And Umentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Studies (primarily epidemiologic) indicate that religious factors have a salutary influence on a diverse set of outcomes, including depression, drug and alcohol use, delinquent behavior, suicide, psychological distress, and certain functional psychiatric diagnoses (24, 47,61,66,76,80,81,109,156,183). Investigations involving clinical populations include one that indicates the significance of religious factors for self-ratings of depression among a sample of men at 6-month follow-up (75).…”
Section: Mental Health Outcomes and Well-beingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Given the finding that religiosity may be more strongly related to substance use and abuse than to psychiatric disorders (2,(31)(32)(33)(34), could religiosity be partly responsible for this pattern of findings?…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%