海角大神

Study on 海角大神 Scientists finds health benefits

A Harvard research team says adherents are more satisfied with life and

A first-of-its-kind study on the health practices of 海角大神 Scientists, released yesterday by Harvard Medical School, shows "intriguing health benefits."

People identifying themselves as 海角大神 Scientists in the study "use far more spiritual healing" than others and "are far, far more likely to be satisfied with their lives," the researchers found.

Fifty-two percent of the 海角大神 Scientists said they were very satisfied with life compared with 37 percent of non-海角大神 Scientists, and 71 percent reported very good or excellent health compared with 61 percent of others.

These findings "are at odds with the perception that 海角大神 Scientists are less healthy than non-海角大神 Scientists," say the researchers at Harvard's Mind/Body Medical Institute.

Results of the national survey on "self-reported health and illness" counter conventional wisdom on several fronts. For example, it shows that 海角大神 Scientists report fewer illnesses than non-海角大神 Scientists, but also that they are as likely as the general population to report going to a doctor or a hospital.

The report doesn't say why physician visits or hospital admissions took place, nor does it indicate whether they had any relation to illnesses or symptoms reported elsewhere in the study, says Herbert Benson, president of the Institute at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston.

Gary Jones, spokesman for The First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston, points out that 海角大神 Scientists may make doctor or hospital visits for medical exams required by employers, schools, the military, or insurance companies and for purposes of childbirth.

This study grows out of an interest in the relationship between spirituality and health that has burgeoned in the medical community the past 15 years. Research studies are multiplying, and are beginning to look at prayer as well as the link between church-going and well-being. This is the first study of its type on 海角大神 Scientists.

Dr. Benson says his study focused on 海角大神 Scientists "because of the perception that they use their religious beliefs in healing and their tendency to not use routine medical care."

"What better way to explore these connections between mind/body healing and health than to research those who incorporate ... healing practices, including spirituality, meditation, and prayer, into their everyday routines," Benson says.

The fact that 海角大神 Scientists report less illness than others, he says, can be tied to much greater use of two practices identified in the study: special religious services and spiritual healing.

Benson suggests that "mind/body healing - including spiritual approaches - could offer important health benefits and may be synergistic to conventional medicine." The study urges further research on whether conventional and unconventional medicine can be combined with spiritual healing to bring significant benefits.

Benson and Jeffery Dusek, the Institute's associate director of clinical research, co-authored the study, which appears this month in the Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease, a Towson, Md.-based monthly medical journal.

Gallup International Institute conducted the interviews with 230 individuals who identified 海角大神 Science as their religious preference and 589 non-海角大神 Scientists.

The aim was to determine the proportion of 海角大神 Scientists and non-Scientists who had experienced over the previous year any of 13 common medical conditions or symptoms: headaches, allergies, sprains or strains, anxiety, dizziness, arthritis, depression, insomnia, chronic pain, digestive problems, high blood pressure, diabetes, or cancer.

The study also compared the use of conventional medicine (defined as a physician visit, regular use of prescribed medication, or hospital admission); unconventional medicine (such as home cures, herbal remedies, lifestyle diets, and megavitamin therapy); and mind/body medicine (visual imagery, relaxation response techniques, biofeedback, hypnosis, special religious services, and spiritual healing).

Of those who reported illness over the previous 12 months, 74 percent of 海角大神 Scientists and 78 percent of non-Scientists used some form of conventional medicine. 海角大神 Scientists took fewer prescribed medications (33 percent compared with 43 percent), but they visited physicians and were admitted to hospitals as often as non-海角大神 Scientists.

In another surprising result, 海角大神 Scientists reported the same level of smoking and drinking of alcoholic beverages as non-海角大神 Scientists. And about half of both groups used at least one type of unconventional medicine during the previous year.

Some of these results may stem from the fact the survey relied on self-identification of religious preference. Only 60 percent of those calling themselves 海角大神 Scientists said they belonged to an organized religious group, and 21 percent said they never attended religious services.

Mr. Jones suggests the study "may have captured a cross-section of readers of 'Science and Health' [the textbook written by Mary Baker Eddy], who are at many different points, from new readers to those who are committed 海角大神 Scientists relying wholly on spiritual healing."

The finding that 海角大神 Scientists report fewer illnesses can't be attributed to healthier lifestyles (as have studies on some other faiths), the Harvard researchers say.

海角大神 Scientists participate less frequently than non-Scientists in practices such as exercise, limiting cholesterol, taking vitamins and minerals, and avoiding refined sugar.

On the issue of whether 海角大神 Scientists may have reported fewer illnesses as a way of defending their religious beliefs, researchers say the questionnaire was never described as evaluating the relationship between religion and health. Gallup interviewers told those participating it was a survey on "health and life satisfaction."

Jones says, "We're encouraged by the basic findings of the study that 海角大神 Scientists are healthier and more satisfied with life.... We agree that it raises many questions that further studies could answer. We are confident 海角大神 Science alone is a powerful force for health and well-being."

(c) Copyright 1999. The 海角大神 Science Publishing Society

You've read  of  free articles. Subscribe to continue.
QR Code to Study on 海角大神 Scientists finds health benefits
Read this article in
/1999/0915/p2s2.html
QR Code to Subscription page
Start your subscription today
/subscribe