Aging in the Church: How Social Relationships Affect Health

Aging in the Church: How Social Relationships Affect Health

by Neal M. Krause
Aging in the Church: How Social Relationships Affect Health

Aging in the Church: How Social Relationships Affect Health

by Neal M. Krause

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Overview

A growing number of studies indicate that older people in the church form social ties that have a significant positive impact on their physical and mental health. In Aging in the Church, Neal Krause comprehensively assesses the various relationships that stem from church involvement.

Among the many types of relationships Krause explores are close companion friendships, social-support structures (such as assistance provided by fellow church members during difficult times), and interactions that arise from Bible study and prayer groups. Through his thorough investigation of the underlying links between these relationships and the ways they relate to attributes like forgiveness, hope, gratitude, and altruism, the author hopes to explain why older adults who are involved in religious activities tend to enjoy better physical and mental health than those who are not engaged in religious communities. Going beyond merely reviewing the existing research on this subject, Aging in the Church provides a blueprint for taking research on church-based social relationships and health to the next level by identifying conceptual and methodological issues that investigators will confront as they delve more deeply into these connections.

Though these are complex issues, readers will find plain language and literature drawn from a wide array of disciplines, including sociology, psychology, public health, medicine, psychiatry, nursing, social work, gerontology, and theology. Literature, poetry, philosophy, and ethical ideas supplement the insights from these diverse fields. As a result, Aging in the Church takes on a genuinely interdisciplinary focus that will appeal to various scholars, researchers, and students.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781599472416
Publisher: Templeton Press
Publication date: 08/26/2011
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 320
File size: 2 MB

About the Author

Neal Krause is the Marshall H. Becker Collegiate Professor at the School of Public Health and a research professor in the Institute of Gerontology at the University of Michigan. He conducted the first nationwide survey that focused exclusively on the relationship between religion and health among the aging. He has published extensively in this area and is widely recognized as the leading expert in this field. He lives in Ann Arbor, Michigan.

Read an Excerpt

Aging in the Church

How Social Relationships Affect Health


By Neal M. Krause

Templeton Foundation Press

Copyright © 2008 Neal M. Krause
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-59947-144-0



CHAPTER 1

Social Relationships in the Church and Health Problems and Prospects


The purpose of this book is to examine how social relationships that arise in church affect the physical and mental health of older men and women. A number of books have been written about other dimensions of religion and health, such as religious coping (Pargament 1997) and forgiveness (McCullough, Pargament, & Thoresen 2000), but this appears to be the first book that focuses specifically on the health-related consequences of different types of social relationships that are formed by older people in the church. But rather than merely reviewing and critiquing existing studies, the intent of this book is to strike out in a different direction by making a concerted effort to provide researchers with a concrete blueprint for moving forward work on church-based social ties and health. This is accomplished by developing a range of specific and testable hypotheses that link various types of church-based social ties with health and by providing well-developed survey measures that can be used to evaluate them. In the process, a number of methodological and conceptual problems are identified that must be overcome if further progress is to be made. The insights provided in this book arise from the author's extensive experience conducting the first nationwide survey that was devoted exclusively to the study of religion and health in late life. The seven years that it has taken to conduct this research and report the findings that have emerged from it have provided the opportunity for invaluable hands-on experience. When viewed at the broadest level, the intent of this book is to share the insights that were gleaned from this experience with other investigators.

The discussion that follows is divided into four main sections. First, a brief overview of the state of research on religion and health is provided. Problems in this literature are traced to three fundamental shortcomings that involve both conceptual and methodological issues. The field of religion and health is vast, and as a result, it would be impossible to cover adequately in a single volume all the work that has been done. Consequently, the second section is devoted to placing boundaries on the scope of this book, which is accomplished by arguing why it is best to focus on religion instead of spirituality and why it makes sense initially to study older Christians only. Section three contains a detailed rationale for why it is important to study religion, why older people are an especially important group to investigate in this context, and why researchers should focus specifically on social relationships that arise in religious settings. Finally, an overview of the chapters that follow is provided in section four.


Religion and Health: What We Know and What We Need to Do Next

An impressive body of research suggests that people who are involved in religion tend to enjoy better physical and mental health than individuals who are not involved in religion (see Koenig, McCullough, & Larson 2001; Lee & Newberg 2005; and Oman & Thoresen 2005 for reviews of this research). Especially convincing evidence is found in studies on the relationship between religion and mortality. This research reveals that people who go to worship services on a regular basis tend to live longer than individuals who do not attend church as often (e.g., Hummer, Rogers, Nam, & Ellison 1999).

Unfortunately, research on religion and health suffers from a number of problems, and as a result, work in this area is not without its critics (e.g., Sloan & Bagiella 2002). Although a number of shortcomings have been identified in the literature, three are especially troubling: the first has to do with the measurement of religion, the second involves the theoretical and conceptual models that have been developed to explain the relationship between religion and health, and the third arises from overlooking the critically important interface between measurement and theory.


Issues in the Measurement of Religion

With respect to measurement, many investigators often rely on single indicators of involvement in religion, especially the frequency of church attendance. However, religion is a vast conceptual domain that cannot be measured adequately with a single item. Evidence of what is missed by relying on limited strategies to measure religion may be found in three sources. First, a panel of experts who were convened by the National Institute on Aging and the Fetzer Institute identified twelve key dimensions of religion that they maintain are important for research on religion and health (Fetzer Institute/National Institute on Aging Working Group 1999). Included among the potentially important dimensions of religion that were identified by the members of this group are religious meaning, forgiveness, and religious beliefs. Second, based on a detailed series of qualitative studies, Krause (2002a) expanded the field of inquiry by identifying fourteen major dimensions of religion. Among the potentially important facets of religion identified by Krause (2002a) are God-mediated feelings of control, religious doubt, and having a close personal relationship with God. Third, Hill and Hood (1999) compiled a comprehensive catalogue of religion measures. This volume comprises seventeen chapters that contain measures of many different facets of religion that may be associated with health and well-being, including scales of religious development (i.e., developing a mature religious faith) and measures of beliefs about death and the afterlife.

Although researchers have made significant progress in measuring religion during the past few years, there are at least two reasons why many investigators have failed to take advantage of these advances. First, a good deal of the work on the conceptualization and measurement of religion is tucked away in specialty journals and books that are outside the mainstream social and behavioral science literature. For example, the Journal of Psychology and Theology contains a number of papers on how to measure various facets of religion, but this journal is not carried by many libraries. As a result, many health-oriented researchers are unaware of the progress that has been made simply because they do not have ready access to the measures that have been developed. The second reason why there are problems with the measures of religion has to do with the wider context in which research on religion and health is often conducted. A good deal of the work in this field is done by investigators who are primary interested in health and who have not received formal training in religion. As a result, these researchers often design questionnaires that devote considerable space to assessing health-related outcomes while leaving much less room for measures of religion. In the process of developing their interview schedules, they often turn to experts on religion and ask them to provide "three or four good questions to measure religion." It is time to stop this practice. If researchers hope to better understand the relationship between religion and health, then more attention must be given to the complex ways in which religion should be measured.


Developing Conceptual Models of Religion and Health

Delving more deeply into the complex multidimensional aspects of religion presents researchers with a significant challenge. Many of the multidimensional batteries of religion were not developed specifically for research on religion and health, and even those that are used in studies of religion and health are often based on underdeveloped theoretical perspectives. This situation led McFadden (2005) to conclude, "Considerable gerontological research has been designed and conducted with little explicit reference to metatheoretical perspectives and frameworks that guided the development of hypotheses, selection of participants, measures and research design, and interpretation of findings" (166).

However, the call for greater conceptual and theoretical development creates yet another challenge. More specifically, researchers must decide whether they want to devise comprehensive models of religion that encompass all the ways religion may influence health in a single conceptual framework (Koenig et al. 2001), or whether they want to develop more focused models that examine the complex ways in which a single dimension of religion may affect health-related outcomes. For example, Pargament (1997) has done outstanding work with conceptual models that show how religious coping responses affect health. Simply put, the dilemma facing researchers is whether to devise grand theories or mid-range theories to study the relationship between religion and health (Merton 1949).

A central premise in the current volume is that it is not advisable at the present time to devise one grand theoretical model of religion and health. Instead, it makes more sense to begin modestly by developing a series of mid-range theories that aim to capture a number of different ways in which specific components of religion may affect health. There are three reasons for recommending that researchers begin by developing more circumscribed theoretical models. The first may be found in the classic work of William James (1902/1997), who argued, "The divine can mean no single quality, it must mean a group of qualities, by being champions of which in alternation, different men may all find a worthy mission.... So a 'god of battles' must be allowed to be the god for one kind of person, a god of peace and home, the god of another. We must frankly recognize the fact that we live in partial systems, and that parts are not interchangeable in spiritual life" (509).

Second, a similar conclusion has been reached in the contemporary literature on causal modeling. More specifically, Bradley and Schaefer (1998) argue, "It is therefore unlikely that there is a single model of any particular situation.... Reality is too complex and models are too limited. It is more likely that several models each shed light on different facets of the real situation" (29).

Third, there are pragmatic reasons for taking a focused approach to building conceptual models of religion and health. In practice, it is difficult to estimate causal models (especially latent variable models) containing more than about six or seven constructs. Put another way, it is hard to imagine what a conceptual model would look like, or how it could be estimated, if it contained all twelve dimensions of religion identified by the Fetzer Institute/National Institute on Aging Working Group (1999).

The goal of the mid-range theories that are explored in the current volume is to identify a manageable set of theoretically circumscribed intervening variables that link various types of social relationships in the church with health and well-being in late life. Two types of intervening variables are examined in this respect. First, some intervening constructs consist of other dimensions of religion that are typically not associated with social relationships in the church. So, for example, an argument is developed in chapter 2 which suggests that social support from fellow church members shapes the selection and implementation of religiously based stress-coping responses, and these coping responses, in turn, influence health and well-being. This approach to model development is important because it provides a point of departure for ultimately developing larger, grand theories of religion and health in late life. The second type of mediating variables presented in the mid-range theories in this volume are secular in nature. Included among them are self-esteem and optimism (see chap. 2) as well as anger (see chap. 5). This approach to theory construction is important because vast bodies of research link these secular constructs with health and well-being across the life course. Embedding them in mid-range models of religion and health will more tightly integrate research on religion into the mainstream literature on physical and mental health.

Although focusing on mid-range conceptual models of religion and health provides a good point of departure, it is important to keep long-range goals in mind. Instead of getting embroiled in a debate about whether grand or mid-range models are best, it makes more sense to rely on an incremental model-building strategy that uses both approaches. More specifically, a reasonable plan involves the initial development of a series of well-articulated mid-range models that show how specific dimensions of religion are related to health. Then, once the complex relationships involving various aspects of religion are better understood, researchers will be better able to see how they can be fit together to form a larger, more comprehensive conceptual model of religion and health.


Exploring the Interplay between Measurement and Theory

As this discussion of problems in the field reveals, research on religion and health cannot move forward unless adequate attention is paid to measurement and theory. The synthesis of the two is justified because, in the end, they form a seamless whole. This idea is hardly new. The notion was best expressed by Blalock (1982) in his discussion of auxiliary measurement theories. In his view, theory and measurement are inextricably bound. He argued that the selection and development of survey indicators to measure constructs like prayer or social support in church is an inherently theoretical process because embedded in each item are theoretical statements about the nature, meaning, and function of the constructs they are thought to represent. For example, prayer is typically assessed by asking people how often they pray. Therefore, this measurement strategy is based on the assumption that the frequency of prayer is the key factor driving the relationship between prayer and health and that other aspects of prayer, such as the specific content or focus of prayer, are relatively unimportant. But in contrast to measuring how often people pray, other investigators provide evidence that the content of prayer is the critical factor and that meditative prayer (i.e., sitting quietly and contemplating the Divine) may be an especially important correlate of well-being (Poloma & Gallup 1991). Embedded in this alternative measurement strategy is the assumption that the frequency of prayer plays only a secondary role in shaping feelings of psychological well-being.

As this simple example reveals, when insufficient attention is paid to the theoretical underpinnings of study measures, substantive findings from research on religion and health may become ambiguous and difficult to interpret. These problems are especially likely to arise when statistically significant findings fail to emerge from a study. Assume that an investigator relies on a standard measure of the frequency of private prayer and subsequently finds it is not significantly associated with health. Under these circumstances he or she "will not know whether it is the substantive theory, the auxiliary measurement theory, or both that is at fault" (Blalock 1982, 25).

Measurement problems in the social and behavioral sciences are "formidable" (Blalock 1982, 18). This is certainly true of research on religion and health. The only way to overcome these problems is to face them squarely, and for this reason a major emphasis is placed throughout this volume on the interplay between theory and measurement.


Setting Boundaries on the Study of Church-Based Social Ties and Health

Although focusing solely on social relationships in the church clearly narrows the scope of inquiry into the relationship between religion and health, it is, nevertheless, a daunting undertaking. Consequently, two steps were taken to make the task of exploring this facet of religion more manageable.


(Continues...)

Excerpted from Aging in the Church by Neal M. Krause. Copyright © 2008 Neal M. Krause. Excerpted by permission of Templeton Foundation Press.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments vii

Chapter 1. Social Relationships in the Church and Health: Problems and Prospects / 3

Religion and Health: What We Know and What We Need to Do Next /  4
Setting Boundaries on the Study of Church-Based Social Ties and Health / 9
Why Research on Church-Based Social Ties and Health in Late Life Is Important / 11
Overview of the Chapters That Follow / 28
Conclusions / 31

Chapter 2. Church-Based Social Support: Getting Help during Difficult Times / 33

Conceptualizing and Measuring Informal Church-Based Social Support / 35
Stress-Induced Psychosocial Deficits / 39
Mobilizing Support from Fellow Church Members / 44
Exploring the Benefits of Church-Based Social Support / 46
Sharpening the Theoretical Underpinnings of Church-Based Social Support / 53
Less Familiar Dimensions of Church-Based Social Support / 65
Bringing Different Kinds of Stressors to the Foreground / 70
Conceptual and Methodological Challenges / 75
Conclusions / 78

Chapter 3. Church-Based Companion Friends / 79

Identifying the Basic Nature of Close Companion Friends / 80
Measuring Close Companion Friendships at Church / 85
Linking Close Companion Friendships with Health and Well-Being / 91
Close Companion Friends in Late Life / 102
Close Companion Friends and Health: A Preliminary Empirical Examination / 103
Conceptual and Methodological Challenges / 106
Conclusions / 112

Chapter 4. Social Relationships That Arise from Formal Roles in the Church / 113

Formal Relationships with the Clergy / 113
Bible Study Groups and Prayer Groups / 127
Formal Relationships in Church Volunteer Programs / 134
Formal Assistance for the Homebound / 145
Conclusions / 151

Chapter 5. Negative Interaction in the Church: Exploring the Dark Side of Religion / 155

Measuring Negative Interaction in the Church / 157
Prior Research on Negative Interaction in the Church, Health, and Well-Being / 160
Negative Interaction in the Church and Health: Examining Conceptual Linkages / 162
Negative Interaction with the Clergy / 169
Negative Interaction in the Church during Late Life / 171
Conceptual and Methodological Challenges / 173
Conclusions / 185

Chapter 6. Exploring the Pervasive Influence of Social Structural Factors / 187

A Strategy for Studying Social Structural Variations in Church-Based Social Ties and Health / 189
Variations by Race: Studying Older African Americans / 192
Gender, Church-Based Social Ties, and Health in Late Life / 203
Church-Based Social Ties and Health: Variations by Socioeconomic Status / 216
Conclusions / 229

Chapter 7. Conclusions: Taking a Broader Perspective and Identifying Next Steps / 232

Core Religious Beliefs and Church-Based Social Relationships / 235
General Conceptual and Methodological Challenges / 239
Casting a Broader Net: Delving into the Dark Morass of Subjectivity / 261

Appendix. Technical Details of the Religion, Aging, and Health (RAH) Survey / 267

References / 271

Index / 303

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