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Biotech / Medical : Share your aches,pains,experiences,joys and cures. -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: stockman_scott who wrote (1291)10/19/2007 9:12:31 PM
From: Cogito  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 1564
 
>>Distance running beats morphine for the pain<<

Scott -

Maybe so, but I'm glad they prescribed morphine after my abdominal surgery, and didn't send me out for a nice 10k run instead.

Come to think of it, the morphine wasn't quite cutting it, and they upgraded it to Dilaudid. Even better.

- Allen



To: stockman_scott who wrote (1291)11/29/2007 9:02:01 PM
From: Brumar89  Respond to of 1564
 
When people read of a new supplement which is said to reduce the likelihood of this or that ailment, soon people are flocking to stores to try it out. Accordingly, I submit as food for thought something which studies show promotes health - physical, mental, social - for both individuals, families, and society:

SPIRITUALITY AND LIFE OUTCOMES

I've written several posts citing research showing that spirituality is associated with improved outcomes in life. I expect more of them to follow. Each of these has come from science news reports issued since I began blogging in October 2004. There are enough of them now to justify aggregating them in one place:

Multiple Topics:
April 18, 2005: A Theme Recurs: Evidence Confirms That Religion And Life Health Go Together
(This is the granddaddy of all these studies: a model of excellent research methodology, with a large sample size, predominantly Christians.)

Physical Health:
April 3, 2007: RAND study finds religiosity can be an important tool in preventing the spread of HIV-AIDS
February 9, 2007: "Study recommends greater attention to spiritual needs of people with advanced cancer"
January 31, 2007: "Spirituality plays role in breast cancer information processing for African-American women"
November 29, 2006: "Go to Church and Breathe Easier" (I did not write a blog entry on this, because the possible confounding variables are so many. Nevertheless it tends to support at least the limited conclusion I summarized below.)
October 7, 2006: Religion and Cancer Mortality
June 8, 2006: "Study Finds Greater Religious Involvement Associated With Lower Mortality Risk"
November 21, 2004: More "Benefits" Of Faith: Shorter Hospital Stays, Better Recoveries

Emotional/Character Growth:
November 24, 2007: "Can Religion Offset the Effects of Child Poverty?"
April 24, 2007: "LiveScience.com - Study: Religion is Good for Kids"
January 3, 2007: Praying Online Helps Cancer Patients
December 8, 2006: Church-going Christians Have Happier, Stronger Marriages
November 18, 2006: "Religious Conservatives Donate Far More Than Secular Liberals"
November 2, 2006: "Faith-Based Youth Groups Stand Out In Fostering Teens' Growth Experiences"
March 16, 2006: Spirituality Associated With Emotional Health Of Resident Physicians
April 27, 2005: Religion and Health Again
December 29, 2004: Still More "Benefits" Of Belief: Fewer Suicides
November 2, 2004: USA TODAY: "A Spiritually Inclined Student Is A Happier Student"

Converse Cases
These studies are not about spirituality per se, but relate to negative effects of living contrary to Biblical principles.
November 23, 2007: "The Dark Underbelly of Cohabitation"
March 7, 2007: Cohabitation before marriage is correlated with violence in marriage
February 26, 2007: Early sex may lead teens to delinquency, study shows
February 24, 2006: Abortion and Mental Health

Unsuccessful Counterexamples:
September 29, 2005: Religion is Bad For Your Country?
July 16, 2005: "Prayer's Effect On Health Called Nil By Duke Study" (see also the follow-up, and a contradictory article on March 14, 2007)

The Exception That Really Does Prove the Rule:
October 31, 2006: Intelligent Believers

Other counterexamples will be posted here if any appear. This, so far, is the sum of what I have found in that category.

Do studies like this prove Christianity is for real? No: for one thing, they involve far too many other variables (including other religions included in the study groups); for another, they are all correlational studies that do not show causation. The real value of studies like this is that they refute the view that religion is a scourge on society, a sign of weakness or poor mental health.

For decades, social scientists' thinking about religion was dominated by Freud, who considered religion to be the universal neurosis, and by Schopenhauer, who reduced it to mere wish fulfillment. Marx famously called it the opiate of the people, a means of deadening oneself to the realities of life. If that were true, though, religious attitudes should be generally accompanied by other evidence of neuroses (to stick with Freud's dated term) or of socio-emotional weakness. The opposite is the case. Freud, Marx, and Schopenhauer were wrong.

We can also say confidently that the Bible's predictions of joy, peace, direction, satisfaction, and so on are supported through studies like this.

(This post is a permanent parking place, to aggregate all studies of this nature that I blog on. New studies will be added when they appear in the future. Therefore some of the studies you'll see here will be dated later than the date of this post.)

thinkingchristian.net