Medicine for the Spirit: Religious Coping in Individuals with Medical Conditions

Journal Title: Religions - Year 2010, Vol 1, Issue 1

Abstract

Religious coping now represents a key variable of interest in research on health outcomes, not only because many individuals turn to their faith in times of illness, but also because studies have frequently found that religious coping is associated with desirable health outcomes. The purpose of this article is to familiarize readers with recent investigations of religious coping in samples with medical conditions. The present article will begin by describing a conceptual model of religious coping. The article will then provide data on the prevalence of religious coping in a range of samples. After presenting findings that illustrate the general relationship between religious coping and health outcomes, the article will review more specific pathways through which religious coping is thought to impact health. These pathways include shaping individuals’ active coping with health problems, influencing patients’ emotional responses to illness, fostering social support, and facilitating meaning making. This article will also address the darker side of religious coping, describing forms of coping that are linked to negative outcomes. Examples of religious coping interventions will also be reviewed. Finally, we will close with suggestions for future work in this important field of research.

Authors and Affiliations

Jeremy P. Cummings and Kenneth I. Pargament

Keywords

Related Articles

Biobehavioral Examination of Religious Coping, Psychosocial Factors, and Executive Function in Homebound Older Adults

Introduction: Although many homebound older adults cope well using various resources, including religious coping strategies, some experience prolonged and unresolved psychosocial distress resulting in biological disrup...

Spirituality as a Resource to Rely on in Chronic Illness: The SpREUK Questionnaire

The SpREUK questionnaire (SpREUK is an acronym of the German translation of "Spiritual and Religious Attitudes in Dealing with Illness") was developed to investigate how patients with chronic diseases living in secular...

From Dis-Enclosure to Decolonisation: In Dialogue with Nancy and Mbembe on Self-Determination and the Other

What might a sense of decolonisation (not)/be? Or, what comes after the logic of the coloniser? This question is at the centre of many debates in South Africa and extends to all countries worldwide who are faced with t...

Spiritual Exemplars: An Introduction

This essay introduces the special issue, provides criteria for evaluating spiritual exemplars, presents a case study to illustrate how spiritual exemplars can extend our knowledge of spiritual development, and makes im...

Meaning in History—A Comparison Between the Works of Karl Löwith and Erich Auerbach

Karl Löwith (1897–1973) and Erich Auerbach (1892–1957) were assimilated German Jewish scholars who came to America during and after World War II. In the early 1940s both émigrés wrotetheir masterpieces From Hegel to Ni...

Download PDF file
  • EP ID EP25177
  • DOI https://doi.org/10.3390/rel1010028
  • Views 482
  • Downloads 28

How To Cite

Jeremy P. Cummings and Kenneth I. Pargament (2010). Medicine for the Spirit: Religious Coping in Individuals with Medical Conditions. Religions, 1(1), -. https://europub.co.uk/articles/-A-25177