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Religious and Spiritual Factors in Depression: Review and Integration of the Research

TLDR
Understanding the role that R/S factors play in preventing depression, facilitating its resolution, or leading to greater depression will help clinicians determine whether this is a resource or a liability for individual patients.
Abstract
Depressive symptoms and religious/spiritual (R/S) practices are widespread around the world, but their intersection has received relatively little attention from mainstream mental health professionals. This paper reviews and synthesizes quantitative research examining relationships between R/S involvement and depressive symptoms or disorders during the last 50 years (1962 to 2011). At least 444 studies have now quantitatively examined these relationships. Of those, over 60% report less depression and faster remission from depression in those more R/S or a reduction in depression severity in response to an R/S intervention. In contrast, only 6% report greater depression. Of the 178 most methodologically rigorous studies, 119 (67%) find inverse relationships between R/S and depression. Religious beliefs and practices may help people to cope better with stressful life circumstances, give meaning and hope, and surround depressed persons with a supportive community. In some populations or individuals, however, religious beliefs may increase guilt and lead to discouragement as people fail to live up to the high standards of their religious tradition. Understanding the role that R/S factors play in preventing depression, facilitating its resolution, or leading to greater depression will help clinicians determine whether this is a resource or a liability for individual patients.

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Journal ArticleDOI

The role of religion and spirituality in mental health.

TL;DR: This article reviews recent research into the capacity of religion and spirituality to benefit or harm the mental health of believers and examines the implications this may have for assessment and treatment in psychiatric settings.
Journal ArticleDOI

Religious and spiritual interventions in mental health care: a systematic review and meta-analysis of randomized controlled clinical trials.

TL;DR: RCTs on RSI showed additional benefits including reduction of clinical symptoms (mainly anxiety) and the diversity of protocols and outcomes associated with a lack of standardization of interventions point to the need for further studies evaluating the use of religious/spirituality as a complementary treatment in health care.
Journal ArticleDOI

Religion and Completed Suicide: a Meta-Analysis.

TL;DR: Religion plays a protective role against suicide in a majority of settings where suicide research is conducted, however, this effect varies based on the cultural and religious context.
Journal ArticleDOI

Religion, spirituality and depression in prospective studies: A systematic review

TL;DR: In about half of studies, R/S predicted a significant but modest decrease in depression over time, and studies with more extensive adjustment for confounding variables showed significantly more often associations with less depression.
Journal ArticleDOI

Prevalence of depression in Syrian refugees and the influence of religiosity

TL;DR: A substantial emergence of depressive disorders with no meaningful correlation with the level of religiosity is found on a sample of Syrian refugees who fled their country after the war.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The measurement of observer agreement for categorical data

TL;DR: A general statistical methodology for the analysis of multivariate categorical data arising from observer reliability studies is presented and tests for interobserver bias are presented in terms of first-order marginal homogeneity and measures of interob server agreement are developed as generalized kappa-type statistics.
Journal ArticleDOI

Prevalence, Severity, and Comorbidity of 12-Month DSM-IV Disorders in the National Comorbidity Survey Replication

TL;DR: Although mental disorders are widespread, serious cases are concentrated among a relatively small proportion of cases with high comorbidity, as shown in the recently completed US National Comorbidities Survey Replication.
Book

Handbook of Religion and Health

TL;DR: This paper reviewed and discussed the full range of research on religion and a variety of mental and physical health outcomes, and built theoretical models illustrating the various behavioural, psychological, and physiological pathways by which religion might affect health.
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Trending Questions (1)
Depression leading to cult involvement/joining?

The paper does not specifically address the question of depression leading to cult involvement or joining. The word "cult" is not mentioned in the paper. The paper primarily focuses on the relationship between religious/spiritual factors and depression.