Religious
service attendance may prolong lung health for seniors
Newswise — A new study suggests that churchgoing has more benefits
than spiritual growth and camaraderie — it may boost lung health
too.
Researchers found that seniors who regularly attended religious
services suffered from lower levels of pulmonary decline.
It is important for doctors “to acknowledge that many
patients have a religious life and that this aspect of their
life likely influences their health,” said study lead author
Dr. Joanna Maselko, epidemiology research fellow at the
Harvard School of Public Health.
In recent years, researchers have explored the subject of religion,
examining whether spirituality and prayer may contribute to physical
well-being.
The new research looks at statistics from a previous study of 1,174
seniors followed for an average of almost five years starting in the
late 1980s. The participants, ages 70 to 79, answered questions
about churchgoing and underwent tests of their lung function.
The findings of the new study appear in the upcoming issue of the
Annals of Behavioral Medicine.
“We found that the lungs of elderly persons who continue to attend
religious services stay healthier over time as compared to those who
do not attend religious services,” Maselko said. “We also found that
this could not be explained by the fact that religious people tended
to smoke less and or were more physically active.”
The lung test used — peak expiratory flow rate — measures how fast
people can exhale in liters of air per minute. Men who regularly
attended religious services had a slower rate of decline over time —
dropping 3.71 liters less yearly compared to men who did not attend.
Women who attended services dropped 3.27 liters less than women who
never attended.
“Together, these findings suggest that the pulmonary function of
those who attend services regularly ages at about half the rate of
those who do never attend,” the researchers concluded.
Maselko said the researchers chose to look at lung function because
it’s a good indicator of other health problems and had not been
examined before in this context.
Richard Sloan, Ph.D., professor of behavioral medicine at Columbia
University Medical Center, was skeptical. He said the positive
effects of churchgoing didn’t immediately appear in the study, but
only showed up after the participants have been studied for a few
years.
“Why does [this effect] only begin at 75? Why not 65?” asked Sloan,
author of the upcoming book “Blind Faith: The Unholy Alliance of
Religion and Medicine.”
Sloan added that that it’s difficult to figure out exactly what
religious attendance means since people go to services for so many
reasons: “religious devotion, habit, not having anything else to do,
to fend off loneliness.”
Maselko J. Religious service attendance and decline in pulmonary
function in a high functioning elderly cohort. Annals of
Behavioral Medicine, 32(3), 2006.