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Thursday, September 4, 2008 | Reason : In the News | print version Print | Comments |

Document Participating In Religion May Make Adolescents From Certain Races More Depressed

by Science Daily

Thanks to Jason Pooler for the link.

http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/09/080903134209.htm

Participating In Religion May Make Adolescents From Certain Races More Depressed


ScienceDaily (Sep. 4, 2008) — One of the few studies to look at the effects of religious participation on the mental health of minorities suggests that for some of them, religion may actually be contributing to adolescent depression.

Previous research has shown that teens who are active in religious services are depressed less often because it provides these adolescents with social support and a sense of belonging.

But new research has found that this does not hold true for all adolescents, particularly for minorities and some females. The study found that white and African-American adolescents generally had fewer symptoms of depressive at high levels of religious participation. But for some Latino and Asian-American adolescents, attending church more often was actually affecting their mood in a negative way.

Asian-American adolescents who reported high levels of participation in their church had the highest number of depressive symptoms among teens of their race.

Likewise, Latino adolescents who were highly active in their church were more depressed than their peers who went to church less often. Females of all races and ethnic groups were also more likely to have symptoms of depression than males overall.

Setting all other factors aside, the results suggest that participating in religion at high levels may be detrimental to some teens because of the tensions they face in balancing the conflicting ideals and customs of their religion with those of mainstream culture, said Richard Petts, co-author of the study, who did the work as a doctoral student in sociology at Ohio State University.

"Most research has shown that religious participation, for the most part, is good and can be very helpful for battling depression. But our research has shown that this relationship does not hold true in all instances," he said.

While the study shows that females and males from certain groups may be more inclined to become depressed, involvement in religious services still had an overall positive affect for many youth in the study. The results do provide important insight into the impact of religious participation on teenage depression, but race and gender may only be part of the reason certain youth were more depressed, Petts said.

"The study shows that we need to consider the broader social aspects of institutions such as religion on an individual's well being, both good and bad. We focus specifically on race and gender, but these are not the only two factors that may be contributing to higher and lower depression among youth," he said.

Petts, who is now an assistant professor of sociology at Ball State University, conducted the study with Anne Jolliff when they were both doctoral students at Ohio State. Jolliff is now a research coordinator at Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis. The pair based the study on data from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health, a study surveying middle and high school students throughout the United States.

Adolescents in grades 7 through 12 were initially interviewed in school and a random number of students were again interviewed at home. Students were asked to identify the positive and negative feelings they had experienced in the preceding week such as depression, loneliness, isolation, happiness, or excitement. They were also asked about their behavior in the last year and asked to identify their race, religious preference, and how often they attended services during the same period of time.

Adolescents were then interviewed a second time one year later at home about the same topics. Parents of these adolescents were also asked about their child's moods and behaviors. Only the 12,155 adolescents who participated in both parts of the study and had information from their parents were included in this study.

The results were recently published in the journal Review of Religious Research.

Among adolescents who never attended church, Asian-American adolescents reported 4 percent fewer symptoms of depression in the preceding week than did their African-American peers.

In comparison, Asian-American youth who attended church at least once a week reported 20 to 27 percent more symptoms of depression than their white and African-American peers who attended at the same level.

Latino adolescents fared about the same as Asian Americans, reporting 6 to 14 percent higher rates of depression symptoms than did African-American and white teens when attending church at least once a week.

The results showed that in stark contrast to the findings for white and African-American adolescents, Asian-American adolescents who never attended services and Latinos attending at intermediate levels were the least likely to be depressed within their groups.

The results suggest that something unique was affecting adolescents within these two groups when they went to church often. Petts believes that the traditional nature of religion for these two groups may be conflicting with the ideals and customs of mainstream American society. This conflict may be putting additional stress on these youth as they try to balance competing principles and traditions, he said.

"Asian and Latino youth who are highly involved in a culturally distinct church may have a more difficult time balancing the beliefs of their family and their traditional culture with mainstream society. Their religious institution is telling them what should be important in their lives and how to behave, and mainstream society is saying something else," he said.

At higher levels of participation, Asian-American and Latino adolescents had a harder time juggling which set of ideals to adopt because they were more involved and committed to their religion.

Meanwhile, Asian-American adolescents who had lower levels of involvement in church were able to focus more on life without worrying about conflicting ideals, resulting in lower depression. At lower levels of involvement, adolescents still gained the social support of their religious community while also feeling in touch with mainstream society, Petts said.

The results also showed that the problem for Latino adolescents may be two-fold. At high levels of involvement in their religious community, Latino teens experienced the same tension between culture and society as some Asian-American teens. This led to higher reports of depression symptoms among these youth.

But Latino teens who never attended church reported high levels of depression as well, reporting 26 to 28 percent higher rate of depression symptoms than did white and African-American American youth. Religion is often an important part of social support for these adolescents and no involvement in their religion may leave these teens without a sense of connection to their community and culture, he said.

"Participating to a certain extent may enable these youth to balance their lives better. They have a connection with a religious community and all the benefits it offers, but they are not so immersed that they're out of touch with mainstream society. So they're sort of getting the best of both worlds," Petts said.

The tension between society and religion may also help explain why females who were sexually active report higher levels of depression than do sexually active males. The disconnect between how their religion told them to act and what they chose to do may cause these females to have higher emotional distress and increased depression, he said.

In addition, Latina females who participated heavily in their religion were more likely to become depressed then Latino males. Not only were these young women more at risk for feeling depressed than were their male counterparts, but they were also more depressed then Latina females who attended church at intermittent levels.

"Females in these religious institutions often have subordinate status and if females feel that they don't have equal say in that religious institution, that may contribute to higher levels of depression," Petts said.

This may also explain why attending church at intermediate levels resulted in lower depression for these females. Latina females who attend at moderate levels may benefit from the social support of the religious community, while avoiding the patriarchal tensions experienced by those who attend services weekly.

Comments 1 - 38 of 38 |

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1. Comment #242940 by defaithed on September 4, 2008 at 7:42 pm

Why the odd use of "races" in the article title? The text points to integration between religion and surrounding culture, not actual "race", as the factor behind effect on depression.

Wouldn't "Participating In Religion May Make Adolescents From Certain Cultures More Depressed" be a much more accurate representation of the actual content?

Other Comments by defaithed

2. Comment #242943 by tybowen on September 4, 2008 at 7:53 pm

 avatarMakes perfect sense. I was much more depressed when I was harangued daily about hell fire and all my sins. When I stopped caring about all that crap and decided to live my life for me, my life got so much better. It also was a relief not to have to play mental gymnastics to accept the bible and reality.

Other Comments by tybowen

3. Comment #242944 by 43alley on September 4, 2008 at 7:55 pm

 avatarIt seems there is a new study on religion every couple weeks, and each time they take the opposite stance ... religion improves your health! .... religion makes you depressed .... religion makes you jump higher! ..... religion makes you impotent.

Next to eggs (They're healthy! No, they're bad for you!), religion has the most contradicting studies.

Other Comments by 43alley

4. Comment #242945 by majordomo on September 4, 2008 at 7:56 pm

 avatarI agree with you defaithed but i think the term race is commonly used in the US to distinguish between these groups mentioned.

Not sure what term would be used if a study were carried out on different white american groups (irish, german, greek etc)?

However some of the percentages are quite low - within margins of error I would have thought.

Other Comments by majordomo

5. Comment #242947 by theonlybap on September 4, 2008 at 8:16 pm

majordomo,

I think many, if not most, Americans make a distinction between race and culture. To many, race is a genetically based concept, not just culture. However, I think many would think that certain races have certain cultures.

Anyway, I agree with you and defaithed that "race" was probably not the right term for this article.

Other Comments by theonlybap

6. Comment #242954 by trevok on September 4, 2008 at 9:10 pm

I don't think the term race should ever be employed. Along with it is implied the idea that people with different skin colours have separate biological origins, which is pretty ridiculous. Not only that but dividing people based on skin colour is pretty goofy to begin with, we'd laugh at divisions based on the size of people's ears.

Such "race thinking" even if it has no negative intent, really is negative in itself since it reinforces the notion of separateness. Throw in the 21st century version of race, "ethnicity" with this too.

I agree with the above comments that this seems to be a very American thing. You hardly hear anything about "race" in the Canadian or European media, but it's all over the US.

Other Comments by trevok

7. Comment #242960 by robotaholic on September 4, 2008 at 9:40 pm

 avatarwow, this study is different than most studies in that they used a sample of 12,000! - most studies you see are like 1,500 or 10, or i dunno not 12,000-

this seemed pretty realistic- no sweeping generalizations either...

mabye the percent who were depresssed represent (at least partially) future atheists??? lol possibly because it sure was so in my case!

Other Comments by robotaholic

8. Comment #242964 by Bonzai on September 4, 2008 at 9:49 pm

 avatarIt may be that depressed people are more likely to get religious in the first place. In other words, a correlation shouldn't be mistaken as causation.

If one wants to make the point that religion causes depression, I would think that it is important to specify which religion. I can't see how a guilt tripping religion like Catholicism would have the same effect as say, Hari Krishna-ism.

Other Comments by Bonzai

9. Comment #242987 by Daniella on September 4, 2008 at 11:45 pm

 avatarThey may be depressed because they are worshipping icons that look nothing like them. Christianity especially is an anglo saxon religion. In the majority of the iconography god is white, jesus is white (even though if there was a jesus born in Bethlehem 2000 years ago he would prob look more like Osama bin Laden than the guy that pops up in all the paintings)They're told man was made in god's image but the images they are presented with look nothing like them - you couldn't help feel out of place and wrong.

Other Comments by Daniella

10. Comment #243000 by TalkyMeat on September 5, 2008 at 12:17 am

 avatar#242944 by 43alley:

Butter, surely?

#242987 by Daniella

That wouldn't explain the lower levels of depression in African-American congregations. Perhaps it's the music ;-)

Seriously though, these studies are pretty hopeless - how on earth do you work out the direction of cause and effect, let alone the mechanisms?

Perhaps what we, the community of atheists, skeptics and freethinkers, need to take from this sort of study, is direction regarding the sort of help and support we need to provide for young nonbelievers, especially those coming out in religious families or communities.

Edited: typo

Other Comments by TalkyMeat

11. Comment #243007 by DeepFritz on September 5, 2008 at 12:39 am

 avatar#10 It's definetly the music...

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ope-1Zb5t-k

I think Eddie Izzard here has got it absolutely spot on!

Other Comments by DeepFritz

12. Comment #243010 by rod-the-farmer on September 5, 2008 at 12:53 am

 avatarThere are a great many things missing here, like any discussion of what the students own culture contained that was somehow at odds with the religion they followed. That would seem to be key. Is there a faith out there that preaches eating raw fish is a sin, and so the Asian students feel conflicted ? Second, which religion did they follow ? Was there some correlation between depression and certain faiths ? Maybe some sects don't cause much depression, while others do. With 12,000 people they certainly had enough to publish the stats here.

And another thing...just what is the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health ? Is that any different from one based on latitude ? Then there is the Review of Religious Research. What is that all about ? This article raises more questions than answers.

Other Comments by rod-the-farmer

13. Comment #243022 by gos on September 5, 2008 at 1:57 am

 avatar
rod-the-farmer

Is there a faith out there that preaches eating raw fish is a sin, and so the Asian students feel conflicted ?


Isn't that a bit of a sweeping cultural generalization? :)

rod-the-farmer

And another thing...just what is the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health ? Is that any different from one based on latitude ?


A longitudinal study is one where the same subject(s) are measured repeatedly over a period of time. Wikipedia article: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Longitudinal_study

I'm assuming that you're not just trying to be funny.

Other Comments by gos

14. Comment #243028 by rod-the-farmer on September 5, 2008 at 2:13 am

 avatarThanks for the response. The "raw fish" comment was meant to point out what I feel are essential data missing from this article....what exactly is the source of the conflict experienced by various groups ? Conflict mentioned but not explained is pretty much useless.

Second, the term "longitudinal" as regards surveys may be familiar to some, but was certainly not to me. Thanks for the explanation.

Other Comments by rod-the-farmer

15. Comment #243045 by Chris Davis on September 5, 2008 at 2:57 am

 avatarDepressed adolescents? Well, that's one symptom of religion. The paper "Cross-National Correlations of Quantifiable Societal Health with Popular Religiosity and Secularism in the Prosperous Democracies" (at http://moses.creighton.edu/JRS/2005/2005-11.html ) says it screws up all of society.

CD

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16. Comment #243051 by bugaboo on September 5, 2008 at 3:17 am

TalkyMeat said perhaps its the music...

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/scotland/7598549.stm

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17. Comment #243076 by Neil Schipper on September 5, 2008 at 4:45 am

Did they account for socioeconomic class? Were the families they came from "new" to their religion, like less than 2 or 3 generations? Were the specific forms of religions closer to the fire and brimstone variety, or to the "let's get together and talk about being good" variety?

A hundred years ago astronomers were trying to make sense of the galaxies with data and data interpretation frameworks that weren't nearly up to the task. I would submit that today's sociologists are operating in a similarly primitive state.

Other Comments by Neil Schipper

18. Comment #243080 by Frankiemouse on September 5, 2008 at 4:54 am

The tension between society and religion may also help explain why females who were sexually active report higher levels of depression than do sexually active males. The disconnect between how their religion told them to act and what they chose to do may cause these females to have higher emotional distress and increased depression, he said.


um, when christian (i'm assuming they mean christian when they say religious, but i have no basis for that assumption other than the study was done by a professor at an american institution) religions all seem to teach the premarital sex is a sin why would the above statement affect females more than males?

Other Comments by Frankiemouse

19. Comment #243122 by Ishruul on September 5, 2008 at 6:29 am

 avatarReligion bring depression? Of course it does, I had to go to the christmas sermon or whatever it's called when I was 13. Took only 10 minutes before I got that urging to shoot myself in the head with a saw off shotgun!

Depression!!! The priesthood of boredom couldn't be depressing, with their 2,000 years old book on piety and goodness from people who hoard slaves and sold their daughter. Ye who is without sin cast blah, blah, blah... And the lord begget blah, blah, blah...

They should put some cheap strip-tease hooker up on the altar, that would help soothe the depression!

Other Comments by Ishruul

20. Comment #243131 by Dhamma on September 5, 2008 at 7:11 am

 avatarCan anyone else see the comments on the third page of the last article "opening minds"? My browser can't display it.

Anyway, my christian friend wondered yesterday why I cared about homosexuals if I'm just a product of a "lump of cells" :) I told him I was a human. So I asked him why he with his "good" values don't care about them. I'm still waiting for a response. He can't understand why I have emotions, and seems to think we're all depressed.

I certainly believe some religious people don't become depressed due to the placebo-effect, it just won't make god true anyway.

Other Comments by Dhamma

21. Comment #243132 by Quetzalcoatl on September 5, 2008 at 7:16 am

 avatarDhamma-

I can see all the comments on the page, except for 101 where the text of Laurie's comment is missing.

EDIT- However, comments 1001 to 1009 on the Palin- average thread are invisible, and I can't see any of my comments when I click on Other comments by. Looks like the website's playing up again. I've e-mailed support about it.

Other Comments by Quetzalcoatl

22. Comment #243133 by severalspeciesof on September 5, 2008 at 7:27 am

 avatarComments # 1001 through #1009 on the "Palin-Average isn't good enough" thread are missing on my browser.

That includes what I presume to be a very intelligent comment by you Quetz

Other Comments by severalspeciesof

23. Comment #243135 by Quetzalcoatl on September 5, 2008 at 7:35 am

 avatarSeveralspeciesof-

This is probably my fault. I noticed last night that I would soon be reaching the 3,000 comment mark. And now my "other comments" crashes, so I can't tell when. Coincidence? I think not.

Other Comments by Quetzalcoatl

24. Comment #243137 by Scot Rafkin on September 5, 2008 at 7:37 am

 avatarI just tried to post on the Palin thread, and it went into the ether. Here's what I tried to put there:

Ben Stein commenting on Palin.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OevzQ9XGd7Q

Other Comments by Scot Rafkin

25. Comment #243139 by Dhamma on September 5, 2008 at 7:41 am

 avatarIt's obviously a bug of some kind. It appears to have affected both threads at about the same time, retrospectively that is, as I could see comments that were vanished only later on.

Other Comments by Dhamma

26. Comment #243143 by phasmagigas on September 5, 2008 at 7:54 am

 avatar
I think many would think that certain races have certain cultures


thats the connection, the title implies that some genetic disposition leads to a difference, its not of course its the culture that a person of a particular 'ethnic origin' is brought up in. Its quite obvious to me that a kid with parents from mexico has a different 'culture' than with chinese heritage of african heritage, now there are lots of equivalent aspects of those cultures but they still define them as such.

Other Comments by phasmagigas

27. Comment #243153 by jimbob on September 5, 2008 at 8:09 am

It seems there is a new study on religion every couple weeks, and each time they take the opposite stance ... religion improves your health! .... religion makes you depressed .... religion makes you jump higher! ..... religion makes you impotent.


Of course, but faith requires that you ignore the contrary evidence. Only then can you see how wonderful religion is!

Other Comments by jimbob

28. Comment #243155 by Ex~ on September 5, 2008 at 8:12 am

 avatarI think everyone's interpreting this wrong, and the answer seems very obvious:

Who attends church the most? Whites and blacks. They attend churches filled with white people, or churches filled with black people.

If latinos or asian americans want to attend church, they will undoubtedly find themselves in a predominantly white church, or maybe, perchance, a predominantly black church.

It's the attitude of the whites or, perchance, the blacks, towards the asians or latinos that undoubtedly causes this depression.

While if you're white and you go to church, you are accepted and loved and supported, when you are asian or latino in a white church, they see you as different and odd and are increasingly less accepting.

It's as simple as that, I think, and I have witnessed it firsthand.

Other Comments by Ex~

29. Comment #243158 by Ex~ on September 5, 2008 at 8:15 am

 avatar>um, religions all seem to
>teach the premarital sex is
>a sin why would the above
>statement affect females
>more than males?

Because its much more looked down upon on females. Go read the Bible, if a woman commits adultery, she's a harlot, if a man commits rape, he's just getting to marry the woman.

Other Comments by Ex~

30. Comment #243180 by William Kaiser on September 5, 2008 at 8:45 am

 avatarThe depressing thing about it is that the god-Nazis have just about cornered the market of social gatherings in many areas.

Just imagine a place where people could go to socialize with friends and strangers without having to be subservient to some god-Nazi. It horrifying to have to be in the same room with some person who makes violent threats such as "You WILL burn in hell if you don't obey me!" Or they make idiotic promises such as "You will have eternal life if you just obey me."

I think it would be less depressing to fill the need for Human social interaction without the insane babbling of some god-Nazi.

WK

Other Comments by William Kaiser

31. Comment #243187 by Sage on September 5, 2008 at 9:08 am

Hmm, its also true that the more religious countries have lower suicide rates. Perhaps religious people just have supernatural incentives not to commit suicide (hell, etc) rather than any comfort.

Other Comments by Sage

32. Comment #243261 by Eshto on September 5, 2008 at 10:34 am

 avatarGreat. Next let's do a study of how religion affects gay youths. You'll find the negative pressures and psychological effects are a hundred times worse.

And Ex~, you obviously didn't read the article, because it wasn't about minorities going to visit generally white or black churches. It was the opposite, it said minorities who go to culturally distinct churches had more problems because their churches tended to be more traditional and clashed with modern society.

And if you are really that blissfully unaware of the sexism ingrained in the Abrahamic religions, then you know next to nothing about religion. Double standards and hypocrisy are the rule, not the exception, when it comes to religious sex and gender regulations.

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33. Comment #243285 by robotaholic on September 5, 2008 at 11:18 am

 avatarI really dont' get it. If religious people are less depressed 'generally' then why are they plagued with more divorce, broken families, abortions, pedophilia, and sexual repression resulting in pathological behavior? Shouldn't that make them more depressed? (or mabye they're happy about it?? lol)

Other Comments by robotaholic

34. Comment #243360 by 82abhilash on September 5, 2008 at 2:05 pm

It is odd that a study co-relates depression to races, seems phony to me, race is mostly a superficial non-scientific categorization anyway. There could be cultural and life style differences that could help explain this trend though.

Other Comments by 82abhilash

35. Comment #243487 by Shuggy on September 6, 2008 at 12:36 am

 avatar7. Comment #242960 by robotaholic
wow, this study is different than most studies in that they used a sample of 12,000! - most studies you see are like 1,500 or 10, or i dunno not 12,000-
Large sample sizes are good for detecting subtle effects, but if the depression caused by religion is that subtle it's not very interesting.

Increasing the sample size reduces the margin of error, but at a tapering-off rate - huge sample sizes are no better than moderate sized ones for most purposes.

Other Comments by Shuggy

36. Comment #243518 by Annamation on September 6, 2008 at 4:41 am

 avatarReligion and oppression go hand in hand. Talking from personal experience, years of religious indoctrination left me very depressed amd it was'nt untill I freed myself from this dogma that the depression lifted. I've just finished reading Ayan Hirshi Alis' - Infidel. She talks beautifuly about the effect of religion on society. To my ears it sounded like the suffering of a nation with mass depression.

Other Comments by Annamation

37. Comment #243523 by Logicel on September 6, 2008 at 5:10 am

 avatar33. Comment #243285 by robotaholic on September 5, 2008 at 11:18 am
avatarI really dont' get it. If religious people are less depressed 'generally' then why are they plagued with more divorce, broken families, abortions, pedophilia, and sexual repression resulting in pathological behavior? Shouldn't that make them more depressed? (or mabye they're happy about it?? lol)
________

This may sound obvious and of course it is just anecdotal, but when I was being emotionally and intellectually squeezed bone dry in my oppressive religious upbringing, I acted happy and was regarded as a happy kid, hardly admitting my own pronounced unhappiness to myself. Decades later, I feel happy in general and yet can 'act' unhappy at times, even boldly stating such, though I'm happier/contented/fulfilled on the whole.

There are many aspects that are dodgy in this kind of research, including how can it be determined that folks are truly in touch with their feelings, especially when dealing with such an oppressive perspective, that is, the religious one.

Other Comments by Logicel

38. Comment #243737 by Ed-words on September 7, 2008 at 8:15 am

How's this for irrational?


Jews for Jesus! Atheists for McCain!

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