Studies demonstrating health benefits of religion are many and growing in number, and some claim the results are ripe for application in clinical settings.1,2 However, others argue that the research is not nearly as good or consistent as portrayed, and caution against acting rashly on inconclusive evidence.3,4 The goal of this supplement is to determine what this growing body of research means for Australian practitioners and patients.
Attempts to measure spirituality have taken two approaches:
Asking questions about religious involvement;
Asking questions about positive psychological characteristics, such as meaning and purpose in life, connectedness to others, peacefulness and high personal values.
The second problem with defining spirituality in terms of positive psychological characteristics is that doing so produces a construct that is really a quasi-indicator of mental health. This makes it difficult or impossible to interpret research on the relationship between spirituality and health, especially mental health. Correlating a construct defined by indicators of mental health (spirituality) with another mental health construct (eg, wellbeing, life satisfaction, depression or anxiety) will always lead to an association between the two. Such an approach could also lead to false relationships between spirituality and physical health, given the strong links between mental and physical health.
The word spirituality, when used in research, should be restricted to those things that have something to do with the sacred (as defined above). If there is no connection with the sacred, then it should not be referred to as spiritual or spirituality. We already have psychological and social terms to deal with concepts that all humans have in common, regardless of belief, and I think we should keep these concepts distinct from religious terms. I realise that many others in both the United States and Australia will not share this opinion, including a number of authors who have contributed to this supplement. From a purely scientific standpoint, if we are to study the relationships between religion, spirituality and health, it is essential to have constructs that are clear and non-overlapping.
For these reasons, I refer mainly to religion when discussing relationships with mental and physical health. My definition of religion, however, is quite broad and means a lot more than just institutional religion or religious affiliation. Another reason for using religious language when discussing the research is that most published research has really been examining religion, even if it is presented and discussed in terms of spirituality.
However, when talking with patients in clinical practice, there are good reasons for using the word spirituality, rather than religion. Research shows that, while many patients do not distinguish between being religious or spiritual,5 others feel alienated from institutional religion and see themselves more as spiritual than as religious. This may be particularly true for patients in Australia. The term spirituality is vague enough to allow patients themselves to define the playing field.
Why should religion and health be connected? The argument is a rational one. If religious people have a world view that gives hope and meaning in the face of stress and loss, if they have social support from other members of the religious community, and if they live healthier lifestyles by smoking less, drinking less, and making more conservative, less risky decisions in marriage, the workplace, and recreational activities, there is good reason to expect that they will have better physical health as well. All of these factors influence health in ways that are increasingly being understood through the field of psychosomatic medicine.6 It should not be surprising, then, that in 2006 more than 70 published research studies examined the relationships between religion, spirituality and health, many finding positive relationships.7
The articles in this supplement review research on religion, spirituality and health relevant to Australian patients and practitioners and discuss the application of that research to clinical practice. Although not all of the research comes from Australia, the articles provide an important summary and background that will assist Australian researchers in designing and implementing future research. While most of the articles do not contain original research, they begin to address some of the research gaps identified by Peach in 2003.8 Williams and Sternthal9 assess the importance of religion and spirituality to Australians and discuss the evidence for both positive and negative effects of religion on health (→ Spirituality, religion and health: evidence and research directions). Eckersley10 looks at the relationship between spirituality, religion and health in a broad cultural context (→ Culture, spirituality, religion and health: looking at the big picture), while Wilding11 presents a case study to illustrate the meaning of spirituality at a personal level (→ Spirituality as a sustenance for mental health and meaningful doing: a case illustration). The different approaches to spiritual assessment in health care practice are summarised by Rumbold12 (→ A review of spiritual assessment in health care practice), and Winslow and Wehtje-Winslow13 raise a number of ethical issues relating to the provision of spiritual care (→ Ethical boundaries of spiritual care). Jantos and Kiat14 present evidence on the health benefits of prayer (→ Prayer as medicine: how much have we learned?), and D’Souza15 suggests ways in which clinicians can approach the subject of spirituality with their patients (→ The importance of spirituality in medicine and its application to clinical practice). Hopkins and colleagues16 focus on evidence-based strategies that could be implemented by church-associated organisations to reduce high-risk behaviours in young people (→ Developing healthy kids in healthy communities: eight evidence-based strategies for preventing high-risk behaviour), and, at the other end of the age spectrum, MacKinlay and Trevitt17 provide a model of spiritual tasks in later life (→ Spiritual care and ageing in a secular society).
None identified.