Religion, Spirituality, and Health · Review Article •Religion, Spirituality, and Health: • The...
Transcript of Religion, Spirituality, and Health · Review Article •Religion, Spirituality, and Health: • The...
![Page 1: Religion, Spirituality, and Health · Review Article •Religion, Spirituality, and Health: • The Research and Clinical Implications • - Koenig, Harold G. "Religion, spirituality,](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022062605/5fcb0bcd7925581572559072/html5/thumbnails/1.jpg)
1
2
Review Article
bull Religion Spirituality and Health
bull The Research and Clinical Implications
bull - Koenig Harold G Religion spirituality and health The research and clinical implications International Scholarly
Research Notices 2012 (2012)
3
چرایی انتخاب این موضوع
4
فرمایندمی ( ع)امام باقر
هیچ و هیچ دانشی همچون سالمتی نیستraquo 498 ص10میزان الحکمه ج laquoسالمتی چون سالمت دل نیست
5
28سوره مبارکه الرعد آیه
الله بذكر أال الله بذكر قلوبهم تطمئن و آمنوا الذین raquobull
laquo القلوب تطمئن خدا یاد به دل هایشان و آورده اند ایمان خدا به کسانی که همان bull
آرام دل ها یاد با تنها كه باشید آگاه می گیرد آرام می گیرد
6
(WHO) World Health OrganizationThe
bull defined health in its broader sense in 1946 as a state of complete physical mental and social well-being and not merely the absence of disease or infirmity
7
In addition
bull to health care interventions and a persons surroundings a number of other factors are known to influence the health status of individuals including their background lifestyle and economic social conditions and spirituality these are referred to as determinants of healthldquo
bull Studies have shown that high levels of stress can affect your health[8]
8
جالب است توجه شودکه
دهنده ارائه 2600 حدود در آمریکا متحده ایالت در حاضر حال درbull موسسات روانی بیمارستانهای عمومی بیمارستانهای در معنوی مراقبت هستند شاغل تسکین مراقبتی واحدهای و مدت طوالنی مراقبتی
در معنوی مراقبت دهندگان ارائه از تن ها ده حاضر حال در همچنین bull شبکه یک و هستند کار به مشغول اسرائیل در درمان و بهداشت سیستم
(1)دارد وجود(نیز) سازمانی عضو 21 بر مشتمل معنوی مراقبت
bull 1 Spiritual care in hospitals and other healthcare settings in Israel-a profession in the making[Article in Hebrew]Bar-Sela G Bentur N Schultz M Corn BW PMID25112121[PubMed]
9
(8قانون 22یا 16 ص 1 اعظم جاكسیر ) قوانین عالج
است حیوانى و نفسانى قواى مقویات به استعانت نافعه جیده معالجات از که بدان عارض را یکدیگر آنچه از گردد مى منفعل بدن و نفس از واحد هر که نیست پوشیده و
شودعالج این پس باشد درجه این به بدن در نفسانى امور تأثیر هرگاه و
باشد نافع بالضرور روحانى
10
بنابراین چرایی ما از ارائه این مقاله
از بیماران سالمتی در معنویت مقوله اهمیت و نقش ماندن مغفول -1bull پزشکان بویژه درمان كادر جانب
كادر در حد چه تا معنویت مقوله به پرداختن ضرورت و اهمیت -2bull
شود می احساس درمان
به نسبت ما درمانی مراكز در معنوی مراقبتهای ارائه وضعیت -3bull است حد چه تا آمریکا و غربی كشورهای
با حد چه تا سنتی طب بویژه پزشکی های رشته دانشجویان و اساتید-4bull
را آن حد چه تا یا و دارند آشنایی معنوی های مراقبت آموزشهای گیرند می بکار
11
و باالخره
بلکه نیست کالب ژورنال عنوان به تکلیف یک ارائه تنها هدفbull را آن ما کشور درمان و بهداشت سیستم بشدت که است نیازی
است مرتبط کامال نیز نظام کلی سیاستهای با و کند می احساس
به توجه با -نیاز این رفع و حرکت این شروع که است امید وbull طب عزیز دانشجویان و اساتید در بیشتر معنوی پتانسیل
(اهلل شاء ان)بگیرد شکل حوزه این از - (اهلل بحمد )سنتی
12
محدویت
همه به پرداختن اجازه شاید وقت کمی و مقاله زیاد حجم به توجه باbull باشد نداشته وجود راهبردی و کاربردی مقاله این مهم موضوعات
مستمعین به هم متعال خداوند که کنیم می دعا ابتدا همین در بنابراینbull
این حقیر بنده این به هم و فرماید عنایت را کافی حوصله و صبر ما عزیز برسانم جایی به را بحث مقرر موعد در بتوانم که بدهد را توانایی و توفیق
(اهلل شاء ان)
صالحدید صورت در کشید درازا به بحث اگر که شود می پیشنهاد البتهbull شود گذاشته بحث به موضوع دیگری جلسه در عزیز سروران شما
13
در ضمن
سروران شما متانت و حوصله و صبر از پیشاپیش bull دارم را تشکر و تقدیر كمال گرامی
14
Harold G Koenig MD MHSc Professor of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences
Associate Professor of Medicine Department Division
Psychiatry Geriatric Behavioral Health
15
Training
bull MD MHSc University of CaliforniandashSan Francisco School of Medicine 1982
bull Residency
bull Psychiatry Duke University Medical Center 1989-1992 1991-1992
bull Fellowship
bull Geropsychiatry Duke University Medical Center 1991-1992
16
bull He is currently director of Dukes Center for the Study of ReligionSpirituality and Health
17
Publications Books bull Koenig has authored or edited more than 35 books[1] that
include bull Is religion good for your health The effects of religion on physical
and mental health Harold G Koenig (1997 New York Haworth Pastoral Press)
bull Handbook of religion and mental health Harold G Koenig (1998 New York Academic Press)
bull Handbook of religion and health (see article) Harold G Koenig Michael E McCullough amp David B Larson (2001 New York Oxford University Press)
18
Research bull Koenig has published over 280 scientific articles in
bull peer-reviewed journals bull scholarly professional journal articles
bull and 60 chapters in professional books[1]
bull HIndex=58
19
20
Abstract
bull This paper provides a concise but comprehensive review of research on religionspirituality (RS) and both mental health and physical health
21
It is based on
bull a systematic review of original data-based quantitative research published in peer-reviewed journals between 1872 and 2010 including a few seminal articles published since 2010
22
First
bull I provide a brief historical background to set the stage
bull Then I review research on RS and mental health examining relationships with both positive and negative mental health outcomes
23
where positive outcomes
bull include
bull well-being
bull happiness
bull hope
bull optimism
bull and gratefulness
24
and negative outcomes
bull Involve bull depression bull suicide bull anxiety bull psychosis bull substance abuse bull delinquencycrime bull marital instability bull and personality traits (positive and negative)
25
bull I then explain how and why RS might influence mental health
26
Next I review research on RS and health behaviors such as
bull physical activity
bull cigarette smoking
bull diet
bull and sexual practices
27
followed by a review of relationships between RS and
1 heart disease 2 hypertension 3 cerebrovascular disease 4 Alzheimers disease and dementia 5 immune functions 6 endocrine functions 7 cancer 8 overall mortality 9 physical disability 10 pain and somatic symptoms
28
I then present
bull a theoretical model explaining how RS might influence physical health
29
Finally bull I discuss what health professionals should do in
light of these research findings and make recommendations in this regard
30
31
سر تیترها
فهرست مطالب بطور کاملتر شامل موارد ذیل می باشندbull
32
4 Religion Spirituality and Mental Health
bull 41 Coping with Adversity
bull 42 Positive Emotions
bull 421 Well-BeingHappiness
bull 422 Hope
bull 423 Optimism
bull 424 Meaning and Purpose
bull 425 Self-Esteem
bull 426 Sense of Control
bull 427 Positive Character Traits 33
and negative outcomes
bull 43 Depression
bull 44 Suicide
bull 45 Anxiety
bull 46 Psychotic DisorderSchizophrenia
bull 47 Bipolar Disorder
bull 48 Personality Traits
bull 49 Substance Abuse
bull 410 Social Problems
bull 4101 DelinquencyCrime
bull 4102 Marital Instability
bull 4103 Social Support
bull 4104 Social Capitalسرمایه اجتماعی
34
bull 5 Explaining the Relationship RS and Mental Health
35
6 Religion Spirituality and Health Behaviors
bull 61 Cigarette Smoking
bull 62 Exercise
bull 63 Diet
bull 64 Weight
bull 65 Sexual Behavior
36
7 Religion Spirituality and Physical Health
bull 71 Coronary Heart Disease (CHD) bull 72 Hypertension bull 73 Cerebrovascular Disease bull 74 Alzheimerrsquos Disease and Dementia bull 75 Immune Function bull 76 Endocrine Function bull 77 Cancer bull 78 Physical Functioning bull 79 Self-Rated Health مراقبتی خود
bull 710 Pain and Somatic Symptoms bull 711 Mortality
37
8 Explaining the Relationship RS and Physical Health
bull 81 Psychological
bull 82 Social
bull 83 Health Behaviors
bull 84 Other Pathways
38
9 Clinical Implications
bull 91 Rationale for Integrating Spirituality
bull 92 How to Integrate Spirituality into Patient Care
bull 10 Conclusions
39
bull Conflict of Interests
bull Acknowledgment
bull References 601
40
bull The support to write this paper was provided in part by the John Templeton Foundation
41
bull - Koenig Harold G Religion spirituality and health The research and clinical implications
International Scholarly Research Notices 2012 (2012) اعالمیه های بین المللی تحقیقات علمی
42
Review Article bull Religion Spirituality and Health The
Research and Clinical Implications
bull - Koenig Harold G Religion spirituality and health The research and clinical implications International
Scholarly Research Notices 2012 (2012) اعالمیه های بین المللی تحقیقات علمی
43
1 Historical Background and Introduction
bull Religion medicine and healthcare have been related in one way or another in all population groups since the beginning of recorded history
44
bull Only in recent times have these systems of healing been separated
bull and this separation has occurred largely in highly developed nations
bull in many developing countries there is little or no such separation
45
bull The history of religion medicine and healthcare in developed countries of the West though is a fascinating one
bull The first hospitals in the West for the care of the sick in the general population were built by religious organizations and staffed by religious orders
46
bull Throughout the Middle Ages and up through the French Revolution physicians were often clergy
bull For hundreds of years in fact religious institutions were responsible for licensing physicians to practice medicine
bull In the American colonies in particular many of the clergy were also physiciansmdashoften as a second job that helped to supplement their meager income from church work
47
bull Care for those with mental health problems in the West also had its roots within monasteries and religious communities [2]
bull In 1247 the Priory of St Mary of Bethlehem was built in London on the Thames River [3]
48
bull Originally designed to house ldquodistracted peoplerdquo this was Europersquos (and perhaps the worldrsquos) first mental hospital
bull In 1547 however St Maryrsquos was torn down and replaced by Bethlehem or Bethlem Hospital [4]
49
bull Over the years as secular authorities took control over the institution the hospital became famous for its inhumane treatment of the mentally ill who were often chained [5]thinspdunked in water or beaten as necessary to control them
bull In later years an admission fee (2 pence) was charged to the general public to observe the patients abusing themselves or other patients [4]
50
bull The hospital eventually became known as ldquobedlamrdquo (from which comes the word used today to indicate a state of confusion and disarray)
51
bull In response to the abuses in mental hospitals and precipitated by the death of a Quaker patient in New York asylum in England an English merchant and devout Quaker named William Tuke began to promote a new form of treatment of the mentally ill called ldquomoral treatmentrdquo
52
bull In 1796 he and the Quaker community in England established their own asylum known as the York Retreat [6]
53
bull Not long after this the Quakers brought moral treatment to America where it became the dominant form of psychiatric care in that country [6]
54
bull Established in Philadelphia by the Quakers in 1813 ldquoFriends Hospitalrdquo (or Friends Asylum) became the first private institution in the United States dedicated solely to the care of those with mental illness [7]
55
bull Psychiatric hospitals that followed in the footsteps of Friends Asylum were the McLean Hospital (established in 1818 in Boston and now associated with Harvard) the Bloomingdale Asylum (established in 1821 in New York) and the Hartford Retreat (established in 1824 in Connecticut)mdashall modeled after the York Retreat and implementing moral treatment as the dominant therapy
56
bull It was not until modern times that religion and psychiatry began to part paths
bull This separation was encouraged by the psychiatrist Sigmund Freud
57
bull After being ldquointroducedrdquo to the neurotic and hysterical aspects of religion by the famous French neurologist Jean Charcot in the mid-1880s
bull Freud began to emphasize this in a widely read series of publications from 1907 through his death in 1939
58
bull These writings left a legacy that would influence the practice of psychiatrymdashespecially psychotherapymdashfor the rest of the century
bull and lead to a true schism between religion and mental health care
59
bull That schism was illustrated in 1993 by a systematic review of the religious content of DSM-III-R which found nearly one-quarter of all cases of mental illness being described using religious illustrations [12]
60
bull The conflict has continued to the present day Consider recent e-letters in response to two articles published in The Psychiatristthinspabout this topic [13 14] and an even more recent debate about the role of prayer in psychiatric practice [15]
61
bull This conflict has manifested in the clinical work of many mental health professionals who have generally ignored the religious resources of patients or viewed them as pathological
62
bull Consider that a recent national survey of US psychiatrists found that 56 said they never rarely or only sometimes inquire about religiousspiritual issues in patients with depression or anxiety [16]
63
![Page 2: Religion, Spirituality, and Health · Review Article •Religion, Spirituality, and Health: • The Research and Clinical Implications • - Koenig, Harold G. "Religion, spirituality,](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022062605/5fcb0bcd7925581572559072/html5/thumbnails/2.jpg)
2
Review Article
bull Religion Spirituality and Health
bull The Research and Clinical Implications
bull - Koenig Harold G Religion spirituality and health The research and clinical implications International Scholarly
Research Notices 2012 (2012)
3
چرایی انتخاب این موضوع
4
فرمایندمی ( ع)امام باقر
هیچ و هیچ دانشی همچون سالمتی نیستraquo 498 ص10میزان الحکمه ج laquoسالمتی چون سالمت دل نیست
5
28سوره مبارکه الرعد آیه
الله بذكر أال الله بذكر قلوبهم تطمئن و آمنوا الذین raquobull
laquo القلوب تطمئن خدا یاد به دل هایشان و آورده اند ایمان خدا به کسانی که همان bull
آرام دل ها یاد با تنها كه باشید آگاه می گیرد آرام می گیرد
6
(WHO) World Health OrganizationThe
bull defined health in its broader sense in 1946 as a state of complete physical mental and social well-being and not merely the absence of disease or infirmity
7
In addition
bull to health care interventions and a persons surroundings a number of other factors are known to influence the health status of individuals including their background lifestyle and economic social conditions and spirituality these are referred to as determinants of healthldquo
bull Studies have shown that high levels of stress can affect your health[8]
8
جالب است توجه شودکه
دهنده ارائه 2600 حدود در آمریکا متحده ایالت در حاضر حال درbull موسسات روانی بیمارستانهای عمومی بیمارستانهای در معنوی مراقبت هستند شاغل تسکین مراقبتی واحدهای و مدت طوالنی مراقبتی
در معنوی مراقبت دهندگان ارائه از تن ها ده حاضر حال در همچنین bull شبکه یک و هستند کار به مشغول اسرائیل در درمان و بهداشت سیستم
(1)دارد وجود(نیز) سازمانی عضو 21 بر مشتمل معنوی مراقبت
bull 1 Spiritual care in hospitals and other healthcare settings in Israel-a profession in the making[Article in Hebrew]Bar-Sela G Bentur N Schultz M Corn BW PMID25112121[PubMed]
9
(8قانون 22یا 16 ص 1 اعظم جاكسیر ) قوانین عالج
است حیوانى و نفسانى قواى مقویات به استعانت نافعه جیده معالجات از که بدان عارض را یکدیگر آنچه از گردد مى منفعل بدن و نفس از واحد هر که نیست پوشیده و
شودعالج این پس باشد درجه این به بدن در نفسانى امور تأثیر هرگاه و
باشد نافع بالضرور روحانى
10
بنابراین چرایی ما از ارائه این مقاله
از بیماران سالمتی در معنویت مقوله اهمیت و نقش ماندن مغفول -1bull پزشکان بویژه درمان كادر جانب
كادر در حد چه تا معنویت مقوله به پرداختن ضرورت و اهمیت -2bull
شود می احساس درمان
به نسبت ما درمانی مراكز در معنوی مراقبتهای ارائه وضعیت -3bull است حد چه تا آمریکا و غربی كشورهای
با حد چه تا سنتی طب بویژه پزشکی های رشته دانشجویان و اساتید-4bull
را آن حد چه تا یا و دارند آشنایی معنوی های مراقبت آموزشهای گیرند می بکار
11
و باالخره
بلکه نیست کالب ژورنال عنوان به تکلیف یک ارائه تنها هدفbull را آن ما کشور درمان و بهداشت سیستم بشدت که است نیازی
است مرتبط کامال نیز نظام کلی سیاستهای با و کند می احساس
به توجه با -نیاز این رفع و حرکت این شروع که است امید وbull طب عزیز دانشجویان و اساتید در بیشتر معنوی پتانسیل
(اهلل شاء ان)بگیرد شکل حوزه این از - (اهلل بحمد )سنتی
12
محدویت
همه به پرداختن اجازه شاید وقت کمی و مقاله زیاد حجم به توجه باbull باشد نداشته وجود راهبردی و کاربردی مقاله این مهم موضوعات
مستمعین به هم متعال خداوند که کنیم می دعا ابتدا همین در بنابراینbull
این حقیر بنده این به هم و فرماید عنایت را کافی حوصله و صبر ما عزیز برسانم جایی به را بحث مقرر موعد در بتوانم که بدهد را توانایی و توفیق
(اهلل شاء ان)
صالحدید صورت در کشید درازا به بحث اگر که شود می پیشنهاد البتهbull شود گذاشته بحث به موضوع دیگری جلسه در عزیز سروران شما
13
در ضمن
سروران شما متانت و حوصله و صبر از پیشاپیش bull دارم را تشکر و تقدیر كمال گرامی
14
Harold G Koenig MD MHSc Professor of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences
Associate Professor of Medicine Department Division
Psychiatry Geriatric Behavioral Health
15
Training
bull MD MHSc University of CaliforniandashSan Francisco School of Medicine 1982
bull Residency
bull Psychiatry Duke University Medical Center 1989-1992 1991-1992
bull Fellowship
bull Geropsychiatry Duke University Medical Center 1991-1992
16
bull He is currently director of Dukes Center for the Study of ReligionSpirituality and Health
17
Publications Books bull Koenig has authored or edited more than 35 books[1] that
include bull Is religion good for your health The effects of religion on physical
and mental health Harold G Koenig (1997 New York Haworth Pastoral Press)
bull Handbook of religion and mental health Harold G Koenig (1998 New York Academic Press)
bull Handbook of religion and health (see article) Harold G Koenig Michael E McCullough amp David B Larson (2001 New York Oxford University Press)
18
Research bull Koenig has published over 280 scientific articles in
bull peer-reviewed journals bull scholarly professional journal articles
bull and 60 chapters in professional books[1]
bull HIndex=58
19
20
Abstract
bull This paper provides a concise but comprehensive review of research on religionspirituality (RS) and both mental health and physical health
21
It is based on
bull a systematic review of original data-based quantitative research published in peer-reviewed journals between 1872 and 2010 including a few seminal articles published since 2010
22
First
bull I provide a brief historical background to set the stage
bull Then I review research on RS and mental health examining relationships with both positive and negative mental health outcomes
23
where positive outcomes
bull include
bull well-being
bull happiness
bull hope
bull optimism
bull and gratefulness
24
and negative outcomes
bull Involve bull depression bull suicide bull anxiety bull psychosis bull substance abuse bull delinquencycrime bull marital instability bull and personality traits (positive and negative)
25
bull I then explain how and why RS might influence mental health
26
Next I review research on RS and health behaviors such as
bull physical activity
bull cigarette smoking
bull diet
bull and sexual practices
27
followed by a review of relationships between RS and
1 heart disease 2 hypertension 3 cerebrovascular disease 4 Alzheimers disease and dementia 5 immune functions 6 endocrine functions 7 cancer 8 overall mortality 9 physical disability 10 pain and somatic symptoms
28
I then present
bull a theoretical model explaining how RS might influence physical health
29
Finally bull I discuss what health professionals should do in
light of these research findings and make recommendations in this regard
30
31
سر تیترها
فهرست مطالب بطور کاملتر شامل موارد ذیل می باشندbull
32
4 Religion Spirituality and Mental Health
bull 41 Coping with Adversity
bull 42 Positive Emotions
bull 421 Well-BeingHappiness
bull 422 Hope
bull 423 Optimism
bull 424 Meaning and Purpose
bull 425 Self-Esteem
bull 426 Sense of Control
bull 427 Positive Character Traits 33
and negative outcomes
bull 43 Depression
bull 44 Suicide
bull 45 Anxiety
bull 46 Psychotic DisorderSchizophrenia
bull 47 Bipolar Disorder
bull 48 Personality Traits
bull 49 Substance Abuse
bull 410 Social Problems
bull 4101 DelinquencyCrime
bull 4102 Marital Instability
bull 4103 Social Support
bull 4104 Social Capitalسرمایه اجتماعی
34
bull 5 Explaining the Relationship RS and Mental Health
35
6 Religion Spirituality and Health Behaviors
bull 61 Cigarette Smoking
bull 62 Exercise
bull 63 Diet
bull 64 Weight
bull 65 Sexual Behavior
36
7 Religion Spirituality and Physical Health
bull 71 Coronary Heart Disease (CHD) bull 72 Hypertension bull 73 Cerebrovascular Disease bull 74 Alzheimerrsquos Disease and Dementia bull 75 Immune Function bull 76 Endocrine Function bull 77 Cancer bull 78 Physical Functioning bull 79 Self-Rated Health مراقبتی خود
bull 710 Pain and Somatic Symptoms bull 711 Mortality
37
8 Explaining the Relationship RS and Physical Health
bull 81 Psychological
bull 82 Social
bull 83 Health Behaviors
bull 84 Other Pathways
38
9 Clinical Implications
bull 91 Rationale for Integrating Spirituality
bull 92 How to Integrate Spirituality into Patient Care
bull 10 Conclusions
39
bull Conflict of Interests
bull Acknowledgment
bull References 601
40
bull The support to write this paper was provided in part by the John Templeton Foundation
41
bull - Koenig Harold G Religion spirituality and health The research and clinical implications
International Scholarly Research Notices 2012 (2012) اعالمیه های بین المللی تحقیقات علمی
42
Review Article bull Religion Spirituality and Health The
Research and Clinical Implications
bull - Koenig Harold G Religion spirituality and health The research and clinical implications International
Scholarly Research Notices 2012 (2012) اعالمیه های بین المللی تحقیقات علمی
43
1 Historical Background and Introduction
bull Religion medicine and healthcare have been related in one way or another in all population groups since the beginning of recorded history
44
bull Only in recent times have these systems of healing been separated
bull and this separation has occurred largely in highly developed nations
bull in many developing countries there is little or no such separation
45
bull The history of religion medicine and healthcare in developed countries of the West though is a fascinating one
bull The first hospitals in the West for the care of the sick in the general population were built by religious organizations and staffed by religious orders
46
bull Throughout the Middle Ages and up through the French Revolution physicians were often clergy
bull For hundreds of years in fact religious institutions were responsible for licensing physicians to practice medicine
bull In the American colonies in particular many of the clergy were also physiciansmdashoften as a second job that helped to supplement their meager income from church work
47
bull Care for those with mental health problems in the West also had its roots within monasteries and religious communities [2]
bull In 1247 the Priory of St Mary of Bethlehem was built in London on the Thames River [3]
48
bull Originally designed to house ldquodistracted peoplerdquo this was Europersquos (and perhaps the worldrsquos) first mental hospital
bull In 1547 however St Maryrsquos was torn down and replaced by Bethlehem or Bethlem Hospital [4]
49
bull Over the years as secular authorities took control over the institution the hospital became famous for its inhumane treatment of the mentally ill who were often chained [5]thinspdunked in water or beaten as necessary to control them
bull In later years an admission fee (2 pence) was charged to the general public to observe the patients abusing themselves or other patients [4]
50
bull The hospital eventually became known as ldquobedlamrdquo (from which comes the word used today to indicate a state of confusion and disarray)
51
bull In response to the abuses in mental hospitals and precipitated by the death of a Quaker patient in New York asylum in England an English merchant and devout Quaker named William Tuke began to promote a new form of treatment of the mentally ill called ldquomoral treatmentrdquo
52
bull In 1796 he and the Quaker community in England established their own asylum known as the York Retreat [6]
53
bull Not long after this the Quakers brought moral treatment to America where it became the dominant form of psychiatric care in that country [6]
54
bull Established in Philadelphia by the Quakers in 1813 ldquoFriends Hospitalrdquo (or Friends Asylum) became the first private institution in the United States dedicated solely to the care of those with mental illness [7]
55
bull Psychiatric hospitals that followed in the footsteps of Friends Asylum were the McLean Hospital (established in 1818 in Boston and now associated with Harvard) the Bloomingdale Asylum (established in 1821 in New York) and the Hartford Retreat (established in 1824 in Connecticut)mdashall modeled after the York Retreat and implementing moral treatment as the dominant therapy
56
bull It was not until modern times that religion and psychiatry began to part paths
bull This separation was encouraged by the psychiatrist Sigmund Freud
57
bull After being ldquointroducedrdquo to the neurotic and hysterical aspects of religion by the famous French neurologist Jean Charcot in the mid-1880s
bull Freud began to emphasize this in a widely read series of publications from 1907 through his death in 1939
58
bull These writings left a legacy that would influence the practice of psychiatrymdashespecially psychotherapymdashfor the rest of the century
bull and lead to a true schism between religion and mental health care
59
bull That schism was illustrated in 1993 by a systematic review of the religious content of DSM-III-R which found nearly one-quarter of all cases of mental illness being described using religious illustrations [12]
60
bull The conflict has continued to the present day Consider recent e-letters in response to two articles published in The Psychiatristthinspabout this topic [13 14] and an even more recent debate about the role of prayer in psychiatric practice [15]
61
bull This conflict has manifested in the clinical work of many mental health professionals who have generally ignored the religious resources of patients or viewed them as pathological
62
bull Consider that a recent national survey of US psychiatrists found that 56 said they never rarely or only sometimes inquire about religiousspiritual issues in patients with depression or anxiety [16]
63
![Page 3: Religion, Spirituality, and Health · Review Article •Religion, Spirituality, and Health: • The Research and Clinical Implications • - Koenig, Harold G. "Religion, spirituality,](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022062605/5fcb0bcd7925581572559072/html5/thumbnails/3.jpg)
Review Article
bull Religion Spirituality and Health
bull The Research and Clinical Implications
bull - Koenig Harold G Religion spirituality and health The research and clinical implications International Scholarly
Research Notices 2012 (2012)
3
چرایی انتخاب این موضوع
4
فرمایندمی ( ع)امام باقر
هیچ و هیچ دانشی همچون سالمتی نیستraquo 498 ص10میزان الحکمه ج laquoسالمتی چون سالمت دل نیست
5
28سوره مبارکه الرعد آیه
الله بذكر أال الله بذكر قلوبهم تطمئن و آمنوا الذین raquobull
laquo القلوب تطمئن خدا یاد به دل هایشان و آورده اند ایمان خدا به کسانی که همان bull
آرام دل ها یاد با تنها كه باشید آگاه می گیرد آرام می گیرد
6
(WHO) World Health OrganizationThe
bull defined health in its broader sense in 1946 as a state of complete physical mental and social well-being and not merely the absence of disease or infirmity
7
In addition
bull to health care interventions and a persons surroundings a number of other factors are known to influence the health status of individuals including their background lifestyle and economic social conditions and spirituality these are referred to as determinants of healthldquo
bull Studies have shown that high levels of stress can affect your health[8]
8
جالب است توجه شودکه
دهنده ارائه 2600 حدود در آمریکا متحده ایالت در حاضر حال درbull موسسات روانی بیمارستانهای عمومی بیمارستانهای در معنوی مراقبت هستند شاغل تسکین مراقبتی واحدهای و مدت طوالنی مراقبتی
در معنوی مراقبت دهندگان ارائه از تن ها ده حاضر حال در همچنین bull شبکه یک و هستند کار به مشغول اسرائیل در درمان و بهداشت سیستم
(1)دارد وجود(نیز) سازمانی عضو 21 بر مشتمل معنوی مراقبت
bull 1 Spiritual care in hospitals and other healthcare settings in Israel-a profession in the making[Article in Hebrew]Bar-Sela G Bentur N Schultz M Corn BW PMID25112121[PubMed]
9
(8قانون 22یا 16 ص 1 اعظم جاكسیر ) قوانین عالج
است حیوانى و نفسانى قواى مقویات به استعانت نافعه جیده معالجات از که بدان عارض را یکدیگر آنچه از گردد مى منفعل بدن و نفس از واحد هر که نیست پوشیده و
شودعالج این پس باشد درجه این به بدن در نفسانى امور تأثیر هرگاه و
باشد نافع بالضرور روحانى
10
بنابراین چرایی ما از ارائه این مقاله
از بیماران سالمتی در معنویت مقوله اهمیت و نقش ماندن مغفول -1bull پزشکان بویژه درمان كادر جانب
كادر در حد چه تا معنویت مقوله به پرداختن ضرورت و اهمیت -2bull
شود می احساس درمان
به نسبت ما درمانی مراكز در معنوی مراقبتهای ارائه وضعیت -3bull است حد چه تا آمریکا و غربی كشورهای
با حد چه تا سنتی طب بویژه پزشکی های رشته دانشجویان و اساتید-4bull
را آن حد چه تا یا و دارند آشنایی معنوی های مراقبت آموزشهای گیرند می بکار
11
و باالخره
بلکه نیست کالب ژورنال عنوان به تکلیف یک ارائه تنها هدفbull را آن ما کشور درمان و بهداشت سیستم بشدت که است نیازی
است مرتبط کامال نیز نظام کلی سیاستهای با و کند می احساس
به توجه با -نیاز این رفع و حرکت این شروع که است امید وbull طب عزیز دانشجویان و اساتید در بیشتر معنوی پتانسیل
(اهلل شاء ان)بگیرد شکل حوزه این از - (اهلل بحمد )سنتی
12
محدویت
همه به پرداختن اجازه شاید وقت کمی و مقاله زیاد حجم به توجه باbull باشد نداشته وجود راهبردی و کاربردی مقاله این مهم موضوعات
مستمعین به هم متعال خداوند که کنیم می دعا ابتدا همین در بنابراینbull
این حقیر بنده این به هم و فرماید عنایت را کافی حوصله و صبر ما عزیز برسانم جایی به را بحث مقرر موعد در بتوانم که بدهد را توانایی و توفیق
(اهلل شاء ان)
صالحدید صورت در کشید درازا به بحث اگر که شود می پیشنهاد البتهbull شود گذاشته بحث به موضوع دیگری جلسه در عزیز سروران شما
13
در ضمن
سروران شما متانت و حوصله و صبر از پیشاپیش bull دارم را تشکر و تقدیر كمال گرامی
14
Harold G Koenig MD MHSc Professor of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences
Associate Professor of Medicine Department Division
Psychiatry Geriatric Behavioral Health
15
Training
bull MD MHSc University of CaliforniandashSan Francisco School of Medicine 1982
bull Residency
bull Psychiatry Duke University Medical Center 1989-1992 1991-1992
bull Fellowship
bull Geropsychiatry Duke University Medical Center 1991-1992
16
bull He is currently director of Dukes Center for the Study of ReligionSpirituality and Health
17
Publications Books bull Koenig has authored or edited more than 35 books[1] that
include bull Is religion good for your health The effects of religion on physical
and mental health Harold G Koenig (1997 New York Haworth Pastoral Press)
bull Handbook of religion and mental health Harold G Koenig (1998 New York Academic Press)
bull Handbook of religion and health (see article) Harold G Koenig Michael E McCullough amp David B Larson (2001 New York Oxford University Press)
18
Research bull Koenig has published over 280 scientific articles in
bull peer-reviewed journals bull scholarly professional journal articles
bull and 60 chapters in professional books[1]
bull HIndex=58
19
20
Abstract
bull This paper provides a concise but comprehensive review of research on religionspirituality (RS) and both mental health and physical health
21
It is based on
bull a systematic review of original data-based quantitative research published in peer-reviewed journals between 1872 and 2010 including a few seminal articles published since 2010
22
First
bull I provide a brief historical background to set the stage
bull Then I review research on RS and mental health examining relationships with both positive and negative mental health outcomes
23
where positive outcomes
bull include
bull well-being
bull happiness
bull hope
bull optimism
bull and gratefulness
24
and negative outcomes
bull Involve bull depression bull suicide bull anxiety bull psychosis bull substance abuse bull delinquencycrime bull marital instability bull and personality traits (positive and negative)
25
bull I then explain how and why RS might influence mental health
26
Next I review research on RS and health behaviors such as
bull physical activity
bull cigarette smoking
bull diet
bull and sexual practices
27
followed by a review of relationships between RS and
1 heart disease 2 hypertension 3 cerebrovascular disease 4 Alzheimers disease and dementia 5 immune functions 6 endocrine functions 7 cancer 8 overall mortality 9 physical disability 10 pain and somatic symptoms
28
I then present
bull a theoretical model explaining how RS might influence physical health
29
Finally bull I discuss what health professionals should do in
light of these research findings and make recommendations in this regard
30
31
سر تیترها
فهرست مطالب بطور کاملتر شامل موارد ذیل می باشندbull
32
4 Religion Spirituality and Mental Health
bull 41 Coping with Adversity
bull 42 Positive Emotions
bull 421 Well-BeingHappiness
bull 422 Hope
bull 423 Optimism
bull 424 Meaning and Purpose
bull 425 Self-Esteem
bull 426 Sense of Control
bull 427 Positive Character Traits 33
and negative outcomes
bull 43 Depression
bull 44 Suicide
bull 45 Anxiety
bull 46 Psychotic DisorderSchizophrenia
bull 47 Bipolar Disorder
bull 48 Personality Traits
bull 49 Substance Abuse
bull 410 Social Problems
bull 4101 DelinquencyCrime
bull 4102 Marital Instability
bull 4103 Social Support
bull 4104 Social Capitalسرمایه اجتماعی
34
bull 5 Explaining the Relationship RS and Mental Health
35
6 Religion Spirituality and Health Behaviors
bull 61 Cigarette Smoking
bull 62 Exercise
bull 63 Diet
bull 64 Weight
bull 65 Sexual Behavior
36
7 Religion Spirituality and Physical Health
bull 71 Coronary Heart Disease (CHD) bull 72 Hypertension bull 73 Cerebrovascular Disease bull 74 Alzheimerrsquos Disease and Dementia bull 75 Immune Function bull 76 Endocrine Function bull 77 Cancer bull 78 Physical Functioning bull 79 Self-Rated Health مراقبتی خود
bull 710 Pain and Somatic Symptoms bull 711 Mortality
37
8 Explaining the Relationship RS and Physical Health
bull 81 Psychological
bull 82 Social
bull 83 Health Behaviors
bull 84 Other Pathways
38
9 Clinical Implications
bull 91 Rationale for Integrating Spirituality
bull 92 How to Integrate Spirituality into Patient Care
bull 10 Conclusions
39
bull Conflict of Interests
bull Acknowledgment
bull References 601
40
bull The support to write this paper was provided in part by the John Templeton Foundation
41
bull - Koenig Harold G Religion spirituality and health The research and clinical implications
International Scholarly Research Notices 2012 (2012) اعالمیه های بین المللی تحقیقات علمی
42
Review Article bull Religion Spirituality and Health The
Research and Clinical Implications
bull - Koenig Harold G Religion spirituality and health The research and clinical implications International
Scholarly Research Notices 2012 (2012) اعالمیه های بین المللی تحقیقات علمی
43
1 Historical Background and Introduction
bull Religion medicine and healthcare have been related in one way or another in all population groups since the beginning of recorded history
44
bull Only in recent times have these systems of healing been separated
bull and this separation has occurred largely in highly developed nations
bull in many developing countries there is little or no such separation
45
bull The history of religion medicine and healthcare in developed countries of the West though is a fascinating one
bull The first hospitals in the West for the care of the sick in the general population were built by religious organizations and staffed by religious orders
46
bull Throughout the Middle Ages and up through the French Revolution physicians were often clergy
bull For hundreds of years in fact religious institutions were responsible for licensing physicians to practice medicine
bull In the American colonies in particular many of the clergy were also physiciansmdashoften as a second job that helped to supplement their meager income from church work
47
bull Care for those with mental health problems in the West also had its roots within monasteries and religious communities [2]
bull In 1247 the Priory of St Mary of Bethlehem was built in London on the Thames River [3]
48
bull Originally designed to house ldquodistracted peoplerdquo this was Europersquos (and perhaps the worldrsquos) first mental hospital
bull In 1547 however St Maryrsquos was torn down and replaced by Bethlehem or Bethlem Hospital [4]
49
bull Over the years as secular authorities took control over the institution the hospital became famous for its inhumane treatment of the mentally ill who were often chained [5]thinspdunked in water or beaten as necessary to control them
bull In later years an admission fee (2 pence) was charged to the general public to observe the patients abusing themselves or other patients [4]
50
bull The hospital eventually became known as ldquobedlamrdquo (from which comes the word used today to indicate a state of confusion and disarray)
51
bull In response to the abuses in mental hospitals and precipitated by the death of a Quaker patient in New York asylum in England an English merchant and devout Quaker named William Tuke began to promote a new form of treatment of the mentally ill called ldquomoral treatmentrdquo
52
bull In 1796 he and the Quaker community in England established their own asylum known as the York Retreat [6]
53
bull Not long after this the Quakers brought moral treatment to America where it became the dominant form of psychiatric care in that country [6]
54
bull Established in Philadelphia by the Quakers in 1813 ldquoFriends Hospitalrdquo (or Friends Asylum) became the first private institution in the United States dedicated solely to the care of those with mental illness [7]
55
bull Psychiatric hospitals that followed in the footsteps of Friends Asylum were the McLean Hospital (established in 1818 in Boston and now associated with Harvard) the Bloomingdale Asylum (established in 1821 in New York) and the Hartford Retreat (established in 1824 in Connecticut)mdashall modeled after the York Retreat and implementing moral treatment as the dominant therapy
56
bull It was not until modern times that religion and psychiatry began to part paths
bull This separation was encouraged by the psychiatrist Sigmund Freud
57
bull After being ldquointroducedrdquo to the neurotic and hysterical aspects of religion by the famous French neurologist Jean Charcot in the mid-1880s
bull Freud began to emphasize this in a widely read series of publications from 1907 through his death in 1939
58
bull These writings left a legacy that would influence the practice of psychiatrymdashespecially psychotherapymdashfor the rest of the century
bull and lead to a true schism between religion and mental health care
59
bull That schism was illustrated in 1993 by a systematic review of the religious content of DSM-III-R which found nearly one-quarter of all cases of mental illness being described using religious illustrations [12]
60
bull The conflict has continued to the present day Consider recent e-letters in response to two articles published in The Psychiatristthinspabout this topic [13 14] and an even more recent debate about the role of prayer in psychiatric practice [15]
61
bull This conflict has manifested in the clinical work of many mental health professionals who have generally ignored the religious resources of patients or viewed them as pathological
62
bull Consider that a recent national survey of US psychiatrists found that 56 said they never rarely or only sometimes inquire about religiousspiritual issues in patients with depression or anxiety [16]
63
![Page 4: Religion, Spirituality, and Health · Review Article •Religion, Spirituality, and Health: • The Research and Clinical Implications • - Koenig, Harold G. "Religion, spirituality,](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022062605/5fcb0bcd7925581572559072/html5/thumbnails/4.jpg)
چرایی انتخاب این موضوع
4
فرمایندمی ( ع)امام باقر
هیچ و هیچ دانشی همچون سالمتی نیستraquo 498 ص10میزان الحکمه ج laquoسالمتی چون سالمت دل نیست
5
28سوره مبارکه الرعد آیه
الله بذكر أال الله بذكر قلوبهم تطمئن و آمنوا الذین raquobull
laquo القلوب تطمئن خدا یاد به دل هایشان و آورده اند ایمان خدا به کسانی که همان bull
آرام دل ها یاد با تنها كه باشید آگاه می گیرد آرام می گیرد
6
(WHO) World Health OrganizationThe
bull defined health in its broader sense in 1946 as a state of complete physical mental and social well-being and not merely the absence of disease or infirmity
7
In addition
bull to health care interventions and a persons surroundings a number of other factors are known to influence the health status of individuals including their background lifestyle and economic social conditions and spirituality these are referred to as determinants of healthldquo
bull Studies have shown that high levels of stress can affect your health[8]
8
جالب است توجه شودکه
دهنده ارائه 2600 حدود در آمریکا متحده ایالت در حاضر حال درbull موسسات روانی بیمارستانهای عمومی بیمارستانهای در معنوی مراقبت هستند شاغل تسکین مراقبتی واحدهای و مدت طوالنی مراقبتی
در معنوی مراقبت دهندگان ارائه از تن ها ده حاضر حال در همچنین bull شبکه یک و هستند کار به مشغول اسرائیل در درمان و بهداشت سیستم
(1)دارد وجود(نیز) سازمانی عضو 21 بر مشتمل معنوی مراقبت
bull 1 Spiritual care in hospitals and other healthcare settings in Israel-a profession in the making[Article in Hebrew]Bar-Sela G Bentur N Schultz M Corn BW PMID25112121[PubMed]
9
(8قانون 22یا 16 ص 1 اعظم جاكسیر ) قوانین عالج
است حیوانى و نفسانى قواى مقویات به استعانت نافعه جیده معالجات از که بدان عارض را یکدیگر آنچه از گردد مى منفعل بدن و نفس از واحد هر که نیست پوشیده و
شودعالج این پس باشد درجه این به بدن در نفسانى امور تأثیر هرگاه و
باشد نافع بالضرور روحانى
10
بنابراین چرایی ما از ارائه این مقاله
از بیماران سالمتی در معنویت مقوله اهمیت و نقش ماندن مغفول -1bull پزشکان بویژه درمان كادر جانب
كادر در حد چه تا معنویت مقوله به پرداختن ضرورت و اهمیت -2bull
شود می احساس درمان
به نسبت ما درمانی مراكز در معنوی مراقبتهای ارائه وضعیت -3bull است حد چه تا آمریکا و غربی كشورهای
با حد چه تا سنتی طب بویژه پزشکی های رشته دانشجویان و اساتید-4bull
را آن حد چه تا یا و دارند آشنایی معنوی های مراقبت آموزشهای گیرند می بکار
11
و باالخره
بلکه نیست کالب ژورنال عنوان به تکلیف یک ارائه تنها هدفbull را آن ما کشور درمان و بهداشت سیستم بشدت که است نیازی
است مرتبط کامال نیز نظام کلی سیاستهای با و کند می احساس
به توجه با -نیاز این رفع و حرکت این شروع که است امید وbull طب عزیز دانشجویان و اساتید در بیشتر معنوی پتانسیل
(اهلل شاء ان)بگیرد شکل حوزه این از - (اهلل بحمد )سنتی
12
محدویت
همه به پرداختن اجازه شاید وقت کمی و مقاله زیاد حجم به توجه باbull باشد نداشته وجود راهبردی و کاربردی مقاله این مهم موضوعات
مستمعین به هم متعال خداوند که کنیم می دعا ابتدا همین در بنابراینbull
این حقیر بنده این به هم و فرماید عنایت را کافی حوصله و صبر ما عزیز برسانم جایی به را بحث مقرر موعد در بتوانم که بدهد را توانایی و توفیق
(اهلل شاء ان)
صالحدید صورت در کشید درازا به بحث اگر که شود می پیشنهاد البتهbull شود گذاشته بحث به موضوع دیگری جلسه در عزیز سروران شما
13
در ضمن
سروران شما متانت و حوصله و صبر از پیشاپیش bull دارم را تشکر و تقدیر كمال گرامی
14
Harold G Koenig MD MHSc Professor of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences
Associate Professor of Medicine Department Division
Psychiatry Geriatric Behavioral Health
15
Training
bull MD MHSc University of CaliforniandashSan Francisco School of Medicine 1982
bull Residency
bull Psychiatry Duke University Medical Center 1989-1992 1991-1992
bull Fellowship
bull Geropsychiatry Duke University Medical Center 1991-1992
16
bull He is currently director of Dukes Center for the Study of ReligionSpirituality and Health
17
Publications Books bull Koenig has authored or edited more than 35 books[1] that
include bull Is religion good for your health The effects of religion on physical
and mental health Harold G Koenig (1997 New York Haworth Pastoral Press)
bull Handbook of religion and mental health Harold G Koenig (1998 New York Academic Press)
bull Handbook of religion and health (see article) Harold G Koenig Michael E McCullough amp David B Larson (2001 New York Oxford University Press)
18
Research bull Koenig has published over 280 scientific articles in
bull peer-reviewed journals bull scholarly professional journal articles
bull and 60 chapters in professional books[1]
bull HIndex=58
19
20
Abstract
bull This paper provides a concise but comprehensive review of research on religionspirituality (RS) and both mental health and physical health
21
It is based on
bull a systematic review of original data-based quantitative research published in peer-reviewed journals between 1872 and 2010 including a few seminal articles published since 2010
22
First
bull I provide a brief historical background to set the stage
bull Then I review research on RS and mental health examining relationships with both positive and negative mental health outcomes
23
where positive outcomes
bull include
bull well-being
bull happiness
bull hope
bull optimism
bull and gratefulness
24
and negative outcomes
bull Involve bull depression bull suicide bull anxiety bull psychosis bull substance abuse bull delinquencycrime bull marital instability bull and personality traits (positive and negative)
25
bull I then explain how and why RS might influence mental health
26
Next I review research on RS and health behaviors such as
bull physical activity
bull cigarette smoking
bull diet
bull and sexual practices
27
followed by a review of relationships between RS and
1 heart disease 2 hypertension 3 cerebrovascular disease 4 Alzheimers disease and dementia 5 immune functions 6 endocrine functions 7 cancer 8 overall mortality 9 physical disability 10 pain and somatic symptoms
28
I then present
bull a theoretical model explaining how RS might influence physical health
29
Finally bull I discuss what health professionals should do in
light of these research findings and make recommendations in this regard
30
31
سر تیترها
فهرست مطالب بطور کاملتر شامل موارد ذیل می باشندbull
32
4 Religion Spirituality and Mental Health
bull 41 Coping with Adversity
bull 42 Positive Emotions
bull 421 Well-BeingHappiness
bull 422 Hope
bull 423 Optimism
bull 424 Meaning and Purpose
bull 425 Self-Esteem
bull 426 Sense of Control
bull 427 Positive Character Traits 33
and negative outcomes
bull 43 Depression
bull 44 Suicide
bull 45 Anxiety
bull 46 Psychotic DisorderSchizophrenia
bull 47 Bipolar Disorder
bull 48 Personality Traits
bull 49 Substance Abuse
bull 410 Social Problems
bull 4101 DelinquencyCrime
bull 4102 Marital Instability
bull 4103 Social Support
bull 4104 Social Capitalسرمایه اجتماعی
34
bull 5 Explaining the Relationship RS and Mental Health
35
6 Religion Spirituality and Health Behaviors
bull 61 Cigarette Smoking
bull 62 Exercise
bull 63 Diet
bull 64 Weight
bull 65 Sexual Behavior
36
7 Religion Spirituality and Physical Health
bull 71 Coronary Heart Disease (CHD) bull 72 Hypertension bull 73 Cerebrovascular Disease bull 74 Alzheimerrsquos Disease and Dementia bull 75 Immune Function bull 76 Endocrine Function bull 77 Cancer bull 78 Physical Functioning bull 79 Self-Rated Health مراقبتی خود
bull 710 Pain and Somatic Symptoms bull 711 Mortality
37
8 Explaining the Relationship RS and Physical Health
bull 81 Psychological
bull 82 Social
bull 83 Health Behaviors
bull 84 Other Pathways
38
9 Clinical Implications
bull 91 Rationale for Integrating Spirituality
bull 92 How to Integrate Spirituality into Patient Care
bull 10 Conclusions
39
bull Conflict of Interests
bull Acknowledgment
bull References 601
40
bull The support to write this paper was provided in part by the John Templeton Foundation
41
bull - Koenig Harold G Religion spirituality and health The research and clinical implications
International Scholarly Research Notices 2012 (2012) اعالمیه های بین المللی تحقیقات علمی
42
Review Article bull Religion Spirituality and Health The
Research and Clinical Implications
bull - Koenig Harold G Religion spirituality and health The research and clinical implications International
Scholarly Research Notices 2012 (2012) اعالمیه های بین المللی تحقیقات علمی
43
1 Historical Background and Introduction
bull Religion medicine and healthcare have been related in one way or another in all population groups since the beginning of recorded history
44
bull Only in recent times have these systems of healing been separated
bull and this separation has occurred largely in highly developed nations
bull in many developing countries there is little or no such separation
45
bull The history of religion medicine and healthcare in developed countries of the West though is a fascinating one
bull The first hospitals in the West for the care of the sick in the general population were built by religious organizations and staffed by religious orders
46
bull Throughout the Middle Ages and up through the French Revolution physicians were often clergy
bull For hundreds of years in fact religious institutions were responsible for licensing physicians to practice medicine
bull In the American colonies in particular many of the clergy were also physiciansmdashoften as a second job that helped to supplement their meager income from church work
47
bull Care for those with mental health problems in the West also had its roots within monasteries and religious communities [2]
bull In 1247 the Priory of St Mary of Bethlehem was built in London on the Thames River [3]
48
bull Originally designed to house ldquodistracted peoplerdquo this was Europersquos (and perhaps the worldrsquos) first mental hospital
bull In 1547 however St Maryrsquos was torn down and replaced by Bethlehem or Bethlem Hospital [4]
49
bull Over the years as secular authorities took control over the institution the hospital became famous for its inhumane treatment of the mentally ill who were often chained [5]thinspdunked in water or beaten as necessary to control them
bull In later years an admission fee (2 pence) was charged to the general public to observe the patients abusing themselves or other patients [4]
50
bull The hospital eventually became known as ldquobedlamrdquo (from which comes the word used today to indicate a state of confusion and disarray)
51
bull In response to the abuses in mental hospitals and precipitated by the death of a Quaker patient in New York asylum in England an English merchant and devout Quaker named William Tuke began to promote a new form of treatment of the mentally ill called ldquomoral treatmentrdquo
52
bull In 1796 he and the Quaker community in England established their own asylum known as the York Retreat [6]
53
bull Not long after this the Quakers brought moral treatment to America where it became the dominant form of psychiatric care in that country [6]
54
bull Established in Philadelphia by the Quakers in 1813 ldquoFriends Hospitalrdquo (or Friends Asylum) became the first private institution in the United States dedicated solely to the care of those with mental illness [7]
55
bull Psychiatric hospitals that followed in the footsteps of Friends Asylum were the McLean Hospital (established in 1818 in Boston and now associated with Harvard) the Bloomingdale Asylum (established in 1821 in New York) and the Hartford Retreat (established in 1824 in Connecticut)mdashall modeled after the York Retreat and implementing moral treatment as the dominant therapy
56
bull It was not until modern times that religion and psychiatry began to part paths
bull This separation was encouraged by the psychiatrist Sigmund Freud
57
bull After being ldquointroducedrdquo to the neurotic and hysterical aspects of religion by the famous French neurologist Jean Charcot in the mid-1880s
bull Freud began to emphasize this in a widely read series of publications from 1907 through his death in 1939
58
bull These writings left a legacy that would influence the practice of psychiatrymdashespecially psychotherapymdashfor the rest of the century
bull and lead to a true schism between religion and mental health care
59
bull That schism was illustrated in 1993 by a systematic review of the religious content of DSM-III-R which found nearly one-quarter of all cases of mental illness being described using religious illustrations [12]
60
bull The conflict has continued to the present day Consider recent e-letters in response to two articles published in The Psychiatristthinspabout this topic [13 14] and an even more recent debate about the role of prayer in psychiatric practice [15]
61
bull This conflict has manifested in the clinical work of many mental health professionals who have generally ignored the religious resources of patients or viewed them as pathological
62
bull Consider that a recent national survey of US psychiatrists found that 56 said they never rarely or only sometimes inquire about religiousspiritual issues in patients with depression or anxiety [16]
63
![Page 5: Religion, Spirituality, and Health · Review Article •Religion, Spirituality, and Health: • The Research and Clinical Implications • - Koenig, Harold G. "Religion, spirituality,](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022062605/5fcb0bcd7925581572559072/html5/thumbnails/5.jpg)
فرمایندمی ( ع)امام باقر
هیچ و هیچ دانشی همچون سالمتی نیستraquo 498 ص10میزان الحکمه ج laquoسالمتی چون سالمت دل نیست
5
28سوره مبارکه الرعد آیه
الله بذكر أال الله بذكر قلوبهم تطمئن و آمنوا الذین raquobull
laquo القلوب تطمئن خدا یاد به دل هایشان و آورده اند ایمان خدا به کسانی که همان bull
آرام دل ها یاد با تنها كه باشید آگاه می گیرد آرام می گیرد
6
(WHO) World Health OrganizationThe
bull defined health in its broader sense in 1946 as a state of complete physical mental and social well-being and not merely the absence of disease or infirmity
7
In addition
bull to health care interventions and a persons surroundings a number of other factors are known to influence the health status of individuals including their background lifestyle and economic social conditions and spirituality these are referred to as determinants of healthldquo
bull Studies have shown that high levels of stress can affect your health[8]
8
جالب است توجه شودکه
دهنده ارائه 2600 حدود در آمریکا متحده ایالت در حاضر حال درbull موسسات روانی بیمارستانهای عمومی بیمارستانهای در معنوی مراقبت هستند شاغل تسکین مراقبتی واحدهای و مدت طوالنی مراقبتی
در معنوی مراقبت دهندگان ارائه از تن ها ده حاضر حال در همچنین bull شبکه یک و هستند کار به مشغول اسرائیل در درمان و بهداشت سیستم
(1)دارد وجود(نیز) سازمانی عضو 21 بر مشتمل معنوی مراقبت
bull 1 Spiritual care in hospitals and other healthcare settings in Israel-a profession in the making[Article in Hebrew]Bar-Sela G Bentur N Schultz M Corn BW PMID25112121[PubMed]
9
(8قانون 22یا 16 ص 1 اعظم جاكسیر ) قوانین عالج
است حیوانى و نفسانى قواى مقویات به استعانت نافعه جیده معالجات از که بدان عارض را یکدیگر آنچه از گردد مى منفعل بدن و نفس از واحد هر که نیست پوشیده و
شودعالج این پس باشد درجه این به بدن در نفسانى امور تأثیر هرگاه و
باشد نافع بالضرور روحانى
10
بنابراین چرایی ما از ارائه این مقاله
از بیماران سالمتی در معنویت مقوله اهمیت و نقش ماندن مغفول -1bull پزشکان بویژه درمان كادر جانب
كادر در حد چه تا معنویت مقوله به پرداختن ضرورت و اهمیت -2bull
شود می احساس درمان
به نسبت ما درمانی مراكز در معنوی مراقبتهای ارائه وضعیت -3bull است حد چه تا آمریکا و غربی كشورهای
با حد چه تا سنتی طب بویژه پزشکی های رشته دانشجویان و اساتید-4bull
را آن حد چه تا یا و دارند آشنایی معنوی های مراقبت آموزشهای گیرند می بکار
11
و باالخره
بلکه نیست کالب ژورنال عنوان به تکلیف یک ارائه تنها هدفbull را آن ما کشور درمان و بهداشت سیستم بشدت که است نیازی
است مرتبط کامال نیز نظام کلی سیاستهای با و کند می احساس
به توجه با -نیاز این رفع و حرکت این شروع که است امید وbull طب عزیز دانشجویان و اساتید در بیشتر معنوی پتانسیل
(اهلل شاء ان)بگیرد شکل حوزه این از - (اهلل بحمد )سنتی
12
محدویت
همه به پرداختن اجازه شاید وقت کمی و مقاله زیاد حجم به توجه باbull باشد نداشته وجود راهبردی و کاربردی مقاله این مهم موضوعات
مستمعین به هم متعال خداوند که کنیم می دعا ابتدا همین در بنابراینbull
این حقیر بنده این به هم و فرماید عنایت را کافی حوصله و صبر ما عزیز برسانم جایی به را بحث مقرر موعد در بتوانم که بدهد را توانایی و توفیق
(اهلل شاء ان)
صالحدید صورت در کشید درازا به بحث اگر که شود می پیشنهاد البتهbull شود گذاشته بحث به موضوع دیگری جلسه در عزیز سروران شما
13
در ضمن
سروران شما متانت و حوصله و صبر از پیشاپیش bull دارم را تشکر و تقدیر كمال گرامی
14
Harold G Koenig MD MHSc Professor of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences
Associate Professor of Medicine Department Division
Psychiatry Geriatric Behavioral Health
15
Training
bull MD MHSc University of CaliforniandashSan Francisco School of Medicine 1982
bull Residency
bull Psychiatry Duke University Medical Center 1989-1992 1991-1992
bull Fellowship
bull Geropsychiatry Duke University Medical Center 1991-1992
16
bull He is currently director of Dukes Center for the Study of ReligionSpirituality and Health
17
Publications Books bull Koenig has authored or edited more than 35 books[1] that
include bull Is religion good for your health The effects of religion on physical
and mental health Harold G Koenig (1997 New York Haworth Pastoral Press)
bull Handbook of religion and mental health Harold G Koenig (1998 New York Academic Press)
bull Handbook of religion and health (see article) Harold G Koenig Michael E McCullough amp David B Larson (2001 New York Oxford University Press)
18
Research bull Koenig has published over 280 scientific articles in
bull peer-reviewed journals bull scholarly professional journal articles
bull and 60 chapters in professional books[1]
bull HIndex=58
19
20
Abstract
bull This paper provides a concise but comprehensive review of research on religionspirituality (RS) and both mental health and physical health
21
It is based on
bull a systematic review of original data-based quantitative research published in peer-reviewed journals between 1872 and 2010 including a few seminal articles published since 2010
22
First
bull I provide a brief historical background to set the stage
bull Then I review research on RS and mental health examining relationships with both positive and negative mental health outcomes
23
where positive outcomes
bull include
bull well-being
bull happiness
bull hope
bull optimism
bull and gratefulness
24
and negative outcomes
bull Involve bull depression bull suicide bull anxiety bull psychosis bull substance abuse bull delinquencycrime bull marital instability bull and personality traits (positive and negative)
25
bull I then explain how and why RS might influence mental health
26
Next I review research on RS and health behaviors such as
bull physical activity
bull cigarette smoking
bull diet
bull and sexual practices
27
followed by a review of relationships between RS and
1 heart disease 2 hypertension 3 cerebrovascular disease 4 Alzheimers disease and dementia 5 immune functions 6 endocrine functions 7 cancer 8 overall mortality 9 physical disability 10 pain and somatic symptoms
28
I then present
bull a theoretical model explaining how RS might influence physical health
29
Finally bull I discuss what health professionals should do in
light of these research findings and make recommendations in this regard
30
31
سر تیترها
فهرست مطالب بطور کاملتر شامل موارد ذیل می باشندbull
32
4 Religion Spirituality and Mental Health
bull 41 Coping with Adversity
bull 42 Positive Emotions
bull 421 Well-BeingHappiness
bull 422 Hope
bull 423 Optimism
bull 424 Meaning and Purpose
bull 425 Self-Esteem
bull 426 Sense of Control
bull 427 Positive Character Traits 33
and negative outcomes
bull 43 Depression
bull 44 Suicide
bull 45 Anxiety
bull 46 Psychotic DisorderSchizophrenia
bull 47 Bipolar Disorder
bull 48 Personality Traits
bull 49 Substance Abuse
bull 410 Social Problems
bull 4101 DelinquencyCrime
bull 4102 Marital Instability
bull 4103 Social Support
bull 4104 Social Capitalسرمایه اجتماعی
34
bull 5 Explaining the Relationship RS and Mental Health
35
6 Religion Spirituality and Health Behaviors
bull 61 Cigarette Smoking
bull 62 Exercise
bull 63 Diet
bull 64 Weight
bull 65 Sexual Behavior
36
7 Religion Spirituality and Physical Health
bull 71 Coronary Heart Disease (CHD) bull 72 Hypertension bull 73 Cerebrovascular Disease bull 74 Alzheimerrsquos Disease and Dementia bull 75 Immune Function bull 76 Endocrine Function bull 77 Cancer bull 78 Physical Functioning bull 79 Self-Rated Health مراقبتی خود
bull 710 Pain and Somatic Symptoms bull 711 Mortality
37
8 Explaining the Relationship RS and Physical Health
bull 81 Psychological
bull 82 Social
bull 83 Health Behaviors
bull 84 Other Pathways
38
9 Clinical Implications
bull 91 Rationale for Integrating Spirituality
bull 92 How to Integrate Spirituality into Patient Care
bull 10 Conclusions
39
bull Conflict of Interests
bull Acknowledgment
bull References 601
40
bull The support to write this paper was provided in part by the John Templeton Foundation
41
bull - Koenig Harold G Religion spirituality and health The research and clinical implications
International Scholarly Research Notices 2012 (2012) اعالمیه های بین المللی تحقیقات علمی
42
Review Article bull Religion Spirituality and Health The
Research and Clinical Implications
bull - Koenig Harold G Religion spirituality and health The research and clinical implications International
Scholarly Research Notices 2012 (2012) اعالمیه های بین المللی تحقیقات علمی
43
1 Historical Background and Introduction
bull Religion medicine and healthcare have been related in one way or another in all population groups since the beginning of recorded history
44
bull Only in recent times have these systems of healing been separated
bull and this separation has occurred largely in highly developed nations
bull in many developing countries there is little or no such separation
45
bull The history of religion medicine and healthcare in developed countries of the West though is a fascinating one
bull The first hospitals in the West for the care of the sick in the general population were built by religious organizations and staffed by religious orders
46
bull Throughout the Middle Ages and up through the French Revolution physicians were often clergy
bull For hundreds of years in fact religious institutions were responsible for licensing physicians to practice medicine
bull In the American colonies in particular many of the clergy were also physiciansmdashoften as a second job that helped to supplement their meager income from church work
47
bull Care for those with mental health problems in the West also had its roots within monasteries and religious communities [2]
bull In 1247 the Priory of St Mary of Bethlehem was built in London on the Thames River [3]
48
bull Originally designed to house ldquodistracted peoplerdquo this was Europersquos (and perhaps the worldrsquos) first mental hospital
bull In 1547 however St Maryrsquos was torn down and replaced by Bethlehem or Bethlem Hospital [4]
49
bull Over the years as secular authorities took control over the institution the hospital became famous for its inhumane treatment of the mentally ill who were often chained [5]thinspdunked in water or beaten as necessary to control them
bull In later years an admission fee (2 pence) was charged to the general public to observe the patients abusing themselves or other patients [4]
50
bull The hospital eventually became known as ldquobedlamrdquo (from which comes the word used today to indicate a state of confusion and disarray)
51
bull In response to the abuses in mental hospitals and precipitated by the death of a Quaker patient in New York asylum in England an English merchant and devout Quaker named William Tuke began to promote a new form of treatment of the mentally ill called ldquomoral treatmentrdquo
52
bull In 1796 he and the Quaker community in England established their own asylum known as the York Retreat [6]
53
bull Not long after this the Quakers brought moral treatment to America where it became the dominant form of psychiatric care in that country [6]
54
bull Established in Philadelphia by the Quakers in 1813 ldquoFriends Hospitalrdquo (or Friends Asylum) became the first private institution in the United States dedicated solely to the care of those with mental illness [7]
55
bull Psychiatric hospitals that followed in the footsteps of Friends Asylum were the McLean Hospital (established in 1818 in Boston and now associated with Harvard) the Bloomingdale Asylum (established in 1821 in New York) and the Hartford Retreat (established in 1824 in Connecticut)mdashall modeled after the York Retreat and implementing moral treatment as the dominant therapy
56
bull It was not until modern times that religion and psychiatry began to part paths
bull This separation was encouraged by the psychiatrist Sigmund Freud
57
bull After being ldquointroducedrdquo to the neurotic and hysterical aspects of religion by the famous French neurologist Jean Charcot in the mid-1880s
bull Freud began to emphasize this in a widely read series of publications from 1907 through his death in 1939
58
bull These writings left a legacy that would influence the practice of psychiatrymdashespecially psychotherapymdashfor the rest of the century
bull and lead to a true schism between religion and mental health care
59
bull That schism was illustrated in 1993 by a systematic review of the religious content of DSM-III-R which found nearly one-quarter of all cases of mental illness being described using religious illustrations [12]
60
bull The conflict has continued to the present day Consider recent e-letters in response to two articles published in The Psychiatristthinspabout this topic [13 14] and an even more recent debate about the role of prayer in psychiatric practice [15]
61
bull This conflict has manifested in the clinical work of many mental health professionals who have generally ignored the religious resources of patients or viewed them as pathological
62
bull Consider that a recent national survey of US psychiatrists found that 56 said they never rarely or only sometimes inquire about religiousspiritual issues in patients with depression or anxiety [16]
63
![Page 6: Religion, Spirituality, and Health · Review Article •Religion, Spirituality, and Health: • The Research and Clinical Implications • - Koenig, Harold G. "Religion, spirituality,](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022062605/5fcb0bcd7925581572559072/html5/thumbnails/6.jpg)
28سوره مبارکه الرعد آیه
الله بذكر أال الله بذكر قلوبهم تطمئن و آمنوا الذین raquobull
laquo القلوب تطمئن خدا یاد به دل هایشان و آورده اند ایمان خدا به کسانی که همان bull
آرام دل ها یاد با تنها كه باشید آگاه می گیرد آرام می گیرد
6
(WHO) World Health OrganizationThe
bull defined health in its broader sense in 1946 as a state of complete physical mental and social well-being and not merely the absence of disease or infirmity
7
In addition
bull to health care interventions and a persons surroundings a number of other factors are known to influence the health status of individuals including their background lifestyle and economic social conditions and spirituality these are referred to as determinants of healthldquo
bull Studies have shown that high levels of stress can affect your health[8]
8
جالب است توجه شودکه
دهنده ارائه 2600 حدود در آمریکا متحده ایالت در حاضر حال درbull موسسات روانی بیمارستانهای عمومی بیمارستانهای در معنوی مراقبت هستند شاغل تسکین مراقبتی واحدهای و مدت طوالنی مراقبتی
در معنوی مراقبت دهندگان ارائه از تن ها ده حاضر حال در همچنین bull شبکه یک و هستند کار به مشغول اسرائیل در درمان و بهداشت سیستم
(1)دارد وجود(نیز) سازمانی عضو 21 بر مشتمل معنوی مراقبت
bull 1 Spiritual care in hospitals and other healthcare settings in Israel-a profession in the making[Article in Hebrew]Bar-Sela G Bentur N Schultz M Corn BW PMID25112121[PubMed]
9
(8قانون 22یا 16 ص 1 اعظم جاكسیر ) قوانین عالج
است حیوانى و نفسانى قواى مقویات به استعانت نافعه جیده معالجات از که بدان عارض را یکدیگر آنچه از گردد مى منفعل بدن و نفس از واحد هر که نیست پوشیده و
شودعالج این پس باشد درجه این به بدن در نفسانى امور تأثیر هرگاه و
باشد نافع بالضرور روحانى
10
بنابراین چرایی ما از ارائه این مقاله
از بیماران سالمتی در معنویت مقوله اهمیت و نقش ماندن مغفول -1bull پزشکان بویژه درمان كادر جانب
كادر در حد چه تا معنویت مقوله به پرداختن ضرورت و اهمیت -2bull
شود می احساس درمان
به نسبت ما درمانی مراكز در معنوی مراقبتهای ارائه وضعیت -3bull است حد چه تا آمریکا و غربی كشورهای
با حد چه تا سنتی طب بویژه پزشکی های رشته دانشجویان و اساتید-4bull
را آن حد چه تا یا و دارند آشنایی معنوی های مراقبت آموزشهای گیرند می بکار
11
و باالخره
بلکه نیست کالب ژورنال عنوان به تکلیف یک ارائه تنها هدفbull را آن ما کشور درمان و بهداشت سیستم بشدت که است نیازی
است مرتبط کامال نیز نظام کلی سیاستهای با و کند می احساس
به توجه با -نیاز این رفع و حرکت این شروع که است امید وbull طب عزیز دانشجویان و اساتید در بیشتر معنوی پتانسیل
(اهلل شاء ان)بگیرد شکل حوزه این از - (اهلل بحمد )سنتی
12
محدویت
همه به پرداختن اجازه شاید وقت کمی و مقاله زیاد حجم به توجه باbull باشد نداشته وجود راهبردی و کاربردی مقاله این مهم موضوعات
مستمعین به هم متعال خداوند که کنیم می دعا ابتدا همین در بنابراینbull
این حقیر بنده این به هم و فرماید عنایت را کافی حوصله و صبر ما عزیز برسانم جایی به را بحث مقرر موعد در بتوانم که بدهد را توانایی و توفیق
(اهلل شاء ان)
صالحدید صورت در کشید درازا به بحث اگر که شود می پیشنهاد البتهbull شود گذاشته بحث به موضوع دیگری جلسه در عزیز سروران شما
13
در ضمن
سروران شما متانت و حوصله و صبر از پیشاپیش bull دارم را تشکر و تقدیر كمال گرامی
14
Harold G Koenig MD MHSc Professor of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences
Associate Professor of Medicine Department Division
Psychiatry Geriatric Behavioral Health
15
Training
bull MD MHSc University of CaliforniandashSan Francisco School of Medicine 1982
bull Residency
bull Psychiatry Duke University Medical Center 1989-1992 1991-1992
bull Fellowship
bull Geropsychiatry Duke University Medical Center 1991-1992
16
bull He is currently director of Dukes Center for the Study of ReligionSpirituality and Health
17
Publications Books bull Koenig has authored or edited more than 35 books[1] that
include bull Is religion good for your health The effects of religion on physical
and mental health Harold G Koenig (1997 New York Haworth Pastoral Press)
bull Handbook of religion and mental health Harold G Koenig (1998 New York Academic Press)
bull Handbook of religion and health (see article) Harold G Koenig Michael E McCullough amp David B Larson (2001 New York Oxford University Press)
18
Research bull Koenig has published over 280 scientific articles in
bull peer-reviewed journals bull scholarly professional journal articles
bull and 60 chapters in professional books[1]
bull HIndex=58
19
20
Abstract
bull This paper provides a concise but comprehensive review of research on religionspirituality (RS) and both mental health and physical health
21
It is based on
bull a systematic review of original data-based quantitative research published in peer-reviewed journals between 1872 and 2010 including a few seminal articles published since 2010
22
First
bull I provide a brief historical background to set the stage
bull Then I review research on RS and mental health examining relationships with both positive and negative mental health outcomes
23
where positive outcomes
bull include
bull well-being
bull happiness
bull hope
bull optimism
bull and gratefulness
24
and negative outcomes
bull Involve bull depression bull suicide bull anxiety bull psychosis bull substance abuse bull delinquencycrime bull marital instability bull and personality traits (positive and negative)
25
bull I then explain how and why RS might influence mental health
26
Next I review research on RS and health behaviors such as
bull physical activity
bull cigarette smoking
bull diet
bull and sexual practices
27
followed by a review of relationships between RS and
1 heart disease 2 hypertension 3 cerebrovascular disease 4 Alzheimers disease and dementia 5 immune functions 6 endocrine functions 7 cancer 8 overall mortality 9 physical disability 10 pain and somatic symptoms
28
I then present
bull a theoretical model explaining how RS might influence physical health
29
Finally bull I discuss what health professionals should do in
light of these research findings and make recommendations in this regard
30
31
سر تیترها
فهرست مطالب بطور کاملتر شامل موارد ذیل می باشندbull
32
4 Religion Spirituality and Mental Health
bull 41 Coping with Adversity
bull 42 Positive Emotions
bull 421 Well-BeingHappiness
bull 422 Hope
bull 423 Optimism
bull 424 Meaning and Purpose
bull 425 Self-Esteem
bull 426 Sense of Control
bull 427 Positive Character Traits 33
and negative outcomes
bull 43 Depression
bull 44 Suicide
bull 45 Anxiety
bull 46 Psychotic DisorderSchizophrenia
bull 47 Bipolar Disorder
bull 48 Personality Traits
bull 49 Substance Abuse
bull 410 Social Problems
bull 4101 DelinquencyCrime
bull 4102 Marital Instability
bull 4103 Social Support
bull 4104 Social Capitalسرمایه اجتماعی
34
bull 5 Explaining the Relationship RS and Mental Health
35
6 Religion Spirituality and Health Behaviors
bull 61 Cigarette Smoking
bull 62 Exercise
bull 63 Diet
bull 64 Weight
bull 65 Sexual Behavior
36
7 Religion Spirituality and Physical Health
bull 71 Coronary Heart Disease (CHD) bull 72 Hypertension bull 73 Cerebrovascular Disease bull 74 Alzheimerrsquos Disease and Dementia bull 75 Immune Function bull 76 Endocrine Function bull 77 Cancer bull 78 Physical Functioning bull 79 Self-Rated Health مراقبتی خود
bull 710 Pain and Somatic Symptoms bull 711 Mortality
37
8 Explaining the Relationship RS and Physical Health
bull 81 Psychological
bull 82 Social
bull 83 Health Behaviors
bull 84 Other Pathways
38
9 Clinical Implications
bull 91 Rationale for Integrating Spirituality
bull 92 How to Integrate Spirituality into Patient Care
bull 10 Conclusions
39
bull Conflict of Interests
bull Acknowledgment
bull References 601
40
bull The support to write this paper was provided in part by the John Templeton Foundation
41
bull - Koenig Harold G Religion spirituality and health The research and clinical implications
International Scholarly Research Notices 2012 (2012) اعالمیه های بین المللی تحقیقات علمی
42
Review Article bull Religion Spirituality and Health The
Research and Clinical Implications
bull - Koenig Harold G Religion spirituality and health The research and clinical implications International
Scholarly Research Notices 2012 (2012) اعالمیه های بین المللی تحقیقات علمی
43
1 Historical Background and Introduction
bull Religion medicine and healthcare have been related in one way or another in all population groups since the beginning of recorded history
44
bull Only in recent times have these systems of healing been separated
bull and this separation has occurred largely in highly developed nations
bull in many developing countries there is little or no such separation
45
bull The history of religion medicine and healthcare in developed countries of the West though is a fascinating one
bull The first hospitals in the West for the care of the sick in the general population were built by religious organizations and staffed by religious orders
46
bull Throughout the Middle Ages and up through the French Revolution physicians were often clergy
bull For hundreds of years in fact religious institutions were responsible for licensing physicians to practice medicine
bull In the American colonies in particular many of the clergy were also physiciansmdashoften as a second job that helped to supplement their meager income from church work
47
bull Care for those with mental health problems in the West also had its roots within monasteries and religious communities [2]
bull In 1247 the Priory of St Mary of Bethlehem was built in London on the Thames River [3]
48
bull Originally designed to house ldquodistracted peoplerdquo this was Europersquos (and perhaps the worldrsquos) first mental hospital
bull In 1547 however St Maryrsquos was torn down and replaced by Bethlehem or Bethlem Hospital [4]
49
bull Over the years as secular authorities took control over the institution the hospital became famous for its inhumane treatment of the mentally ill who were often chained [5]thinspdunked in water or beaten as necessary to control them
bull In later years an admission fee (2 pence) was charged to the general public to observe the patients abusing themselves or other patients [4]
50
bull The hospital eventually became known as ldquobedlamrdquo (from which comes the word used today to indicate a state of confusion and disarray)
51
bull In response to the abuses in mental hospitals and precipitated by the death of a Quaker patient in New York asylum in England an English merchant and devout Quaker named William Tuke began to promote a new form of treatment of the mentally ill called ldquomoral treatmentrdquo
52
bull In 1796 he and the Quaker community in England established their own asylum known as the York Retreat [6]
53
bull Not long after this the Quakers brought moral treatment to America where it became the dominant form of psychiatric care in that country [6]
54
bull Established in Philadelphia by the Quakers in 1813 ldquoFriends Hospitalrdquo (or Friends Asylum) became the first private institution in the United States dedicated solely to the care of those with mental illness [7]
55
bull Psychiatric hospitals that followed in the footsteps of Friends Asylum were the McLean Hospital (established in 1818 in Boston and now associated with Harvard) the Bloomingdale Asylum (established in 1821 in New York) and the Hartford Retreat (established in 1824 in Connecticut)mdashall modeled after the York Retreat and implementing moral treatment as the dominant therapy
56
bull It was not until modern times that religion and psychiatry began to part paths
bull This separation was encouraged by the psychiatrist Sigmund Freud
57
bull After being ldquointroducedrdquo to the neurotic and hysterical aspects of religion by the famous French neurologist Jean Charcot in the mid-1880s
bull Freud began to emphasize this in a widely read series of publications from 1907 through his death in 1939
58
bull These writings left a legacy that would influence the practice of psychiatrymdashespecially psychotherapymdashfor the rest of the century
bull and lead to a true schism between religion and mental health care
59
bull That schism was illustrated in 1993 by a systematic review of the religious content of DSM-III-R which found nearly one-quarter of all cases of mental illness being described using religious illustrations [12]
60
bull The conflict has continued to the present day Consider recent e-letters in response to two articles published in The Psychiatristthinspabout this topic [13 14] and an even more recent debate about the role of prayer in psychiatric practice [15]
61
bull This conflict has manifested in the clinical work of many mental health professionals who have generally ignored the religious resources of patients or viewed them as pathological
62
bull Consider that a recent national survey of US psychiatrists found that 56 said they never rarely or only sometimes inquire about religiousspiritual issues in patients with depression or anxiety [16]
63
![Page 7: Religion, Spirituality, and Health · Review Article •Religion, Spirituality, and Health: • The Research and Clinical Implications • - Koenig, Harold G. "Religion, spirituality,](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022062605/5fcb0bcd7925581572559072/html5/thumbnails/7.jpg)
(WHO) World Health OrganizationThe
bull defined health in its broader sense in 1946 as a state of complete physical mental and social well-being and not merely the absence of disease or infirmity
7
In addition
bull to health care interventions and a persons surroundings a number of other factors are known to influence the health status of individuals including their background lifestyle and economic social conditions and spirituality these are referred to as determinants of healthldquo
bull Studies have shown that high levels of stress can affect your health[8]
8
جالب است توجه شودکه
دهنده ارائه 2600 حدود در آمریکا متحده ایالت در حاضر حال درbull موسسات روانی بیمارستانهای عمومی بیمارستانهای در معنوی مراقبت هستند شاغل تسکین مراقبتی واحدهای و مدت طوالنی مراقبتی
در معنوی مراقبت دهندگان ارائه از تن ها ده حاضر حال در همچنین bull شبکه یک و هستند کار به مشغول اسرائیل در درمان و بهداشت سیستم
(1)دارد وجود(نیز) سازمانی عضو 21 بر مشتمل معنوی مراقبت
bull 1 Spiritual care in hospitals and other healthcare settings in Israel-a profession in the making[Article in Hebrew]Bar-Sela G Bentur N Schultz M Corn BW PMID25112121[PubMed]
9
(8قانون 22یا 16 ص 1 اعظم جاكسیر ) قوانین عالج
است حیوانى و نفسانى قواى مقویات به استعانت نافعه جیده معالجات از که بدان عارض را یکدیگر آنچه از گردد مى منفعل بدن و نفس از واحد هر که نیست پوشیده و
شودعالج این پس باشد درجه این به بدن در نفسانى امور تأثیر هرگاه و
باشد نافع بالضرور روحانى
10
بنابراین چرایی ما از ارائه این مقاله
از بیماران سالمتی در معنویت مقوله اهمیت و نقش ماندن مغفول -1bull پزشکان بویژه درمان كادر جانب
كادر در حد چه تا معنویت مقوله به پرداختن ضرورت و اهمیت -2bull
شود می احساس درمان
به نسبت ما درمانی مراكز در معنوی مراقبتهای ارائه وضعیت -3bull است حد چه تا آمریکا و غربی كشورهای
با حد چه تا سنتی طب بویژه پزشکی های رشته دانشجویان و اساتید-4bull
را آن حد چه تا یا و دارند آشنایی معنوی های مراقبت آموزشهای گیرند می بکار
11
و باالخره
بلکه نیست کالب ژورنال عنوان به تکلیف یک ارائه تنها هدفbull را آن ما کشور درمان و بهداشت سیستم بشدت که است نیازی
است مرتبط کامال نیز نظام کلی سیاستهای با و کند می احساس
به توجه با -نیاز این رفع و حرکت این شروع که است امید وbull طب عزیز دانشجویان و اساتید در بیشتر معنوی پتانسیل
(اهلل شاء ان)بگیرد شکل حوزه این از - (اهلل بحمد )سنتی
12
محدویت
همه به پرداختن اجازه شاید وقت کمی و مقاله زیاد حجم به توجه باbull باشد نداشته وجود راهبردی و کاربردی مقاله این مهم موضوعات
مستمعین به هم متعال خداوند که کنیم می دعا ابتدا همین در بنابراینbull
این حقیر بنده این به هم و فرماید عنایت را کافی حوصله و صبر ما عزیز برسانم جایی به را بحث مقرر موعد در بتوانم که بدهد را توانایی و توفیق
(اهلل شاء ان)
صالحدید صورت در کشید درازا به بحث اگر که شود می پیشنهاد البتهbull شود گذاشته بحث به موضوع دیگری جلسه در عزیز سروران شما
13
در ضمن
سروران شما متانت و حوصله و صبر از پیشاپیش bull دارم را تشکر و تقدیر كمال گرامی
14
Harold G Koenig MD MHSc Professor of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences
Associate Professor of Medicine Department Division
Psychiatry Geriatric Behavioral Health
15
Training
bull MD MHSc University of CaliforniandashSan Francisco School of Medicine 1982
bull Residency
bull Psychiatry Duke University Medical Center 1989-1992 1991-1992
bull Fellowship
bull Geropsychiatry Duke University Medical Center 1991-1992
16
bull He is currently director of Dukes Center for the Study of ReligionSpirituality and Health
17
Publications Books bull Koenig has authored or edited more than 35 books[1] that
include bull Is religion good for your health The effects of religion on physical
and mental health Harold G Koenig (1997 New York Haworth Pastoral Press)
bull Handbook of religion and mental health Harold G Koenig (1998 New York Academic Press)
bull Handbook of religion and health (see article) Harold G Koenig Michael E McCullough amp David B Larson (2001 New York Oxford University Press)
18
Research bull Koenig has published over 280 scientific articles in
bull peer-reviewed journals bull scholarly professional journal articles
bull and 60 chapters in professional books[1]
bull HIndex=58
19
20
Abstract
bull This paper provides a concise but comprehensive review of research on religionspirituality (RS) and both mental health and physical health
21
It is based on
bull a systematic review of original data-based quantitative research published in peer-reviewed journals between 1872 and 2010 including a few seminal articles published since 2010
22
First
bull I provide a brief historical background to set the stage
bull Then I review research on RS and mental health examining relationships with both positive and negative mental health outcomes
23
where positive outcomes
bull include
bull well-being
bull happiness
bull hope
bull optimism
bull and gratefulness
24
and negative outcomes
bull Involve bull depression bull suicide bull anxiety bull psychosis bull substance abuse bull delinquencycrime bull marital instability bull and personality traits (positive and negative)
25
bull I then explain how and why RS might influence mental health
26
Next I review research on RS and health behaviors such as
bull physical activity
bull cigarette smoking
bull diet
bull and sexual practices
27
followed by a review of relationships between RS and
1 heart disease 2 hypertension 3 cerebrovascular disease 4 Alzheimers disease and dementia 5 immune functions 6 endocrine functions 7 cancer 8 overall mortality 9 physical disability 10 pain and somatic symptoms
28
I then present
bull a theoretical model explaining how RS might influence physical health
29
Finally bull I discuss what health professionals should do in
light of these research findings and make recommendations in this regard
30
31
سر تیترها
فهرست مطالب بطور کاملتر شامل موارد ذیل می باشندbull
32
4 Religion Spirituality and Mental Health
bull 41 Coping with Adversity
bull 42 Positive Emotions
bull 421 Well-BeingHappiness
bull 422 Hope
bull 423 Optimism
bull 424 Meaning and Purpose
bull 425 Self-Esteem
bull 426 Sense of Control
bull 427 Positive Character Traits 33
and negative outcomes
bull 43 Depression
bull 44 Suicide
bull 45 Anxiety
bull 46 Psychotic DisorderSchizophrenia
bull 47 Bipolar Disorder
bull 48 Personality Traits
bull 49 Substance Abuse
bull 410 Social Problems
bull 4101 DelinquencyCrime
bull 4102 Marital Instability
bull 4103 Social Support
bull 4104 Social Capitalسرمایه اجتماعی
34
bull 5 Explaining the Relationship RS and Mental Health
35
6 Religion Spirituality and Health Behaviors
bull 61 Cigarette Smoking
bull 62 Exercise
bull 63 Diet
bull 64 Weight
bull 65 Sexual Behavior
36
7 Religion Spirituality and Physical Health
bull 71 Coronary Heart Disease (CHD) bull 72 Hypertension bull 73 Cerebrovascular Disease bull 74 Alzheimerrsquos Disease and Dementia bull 75 Immune Function bull 76 Endocrine Function bull 77 Cancer bull 78 Physical Functioning bull 79 Self-Rated Health مراقبتی خود
bull 710 Pain and Somatic Symptoms bull 711 Mortality
37
8 Explaining the Relationship RS and Physical Health
bull 81 Psychological
bull 82 Social
bull 83 Health Behaviors
bull 84 Other Pathways
38
9 Clinical Implications
bull 91 Rationale for Integrating Spirituality
bull 92 How to Integrate Spirituality into Patient Care
bull 10 Conclusions
39
bull Conflict of Interests
bull Acknowledgment
bull References 601
40
bull The support to write this paper was provided in part by the John Templeton Foundation
41
bull - Koenig Harold G Religion spirituality and health The research and clinical implications
International Scholarly Research Notices 2012 (2012) اعالمیه های بین المللی تحقیقات علمی
42
Review Article bull Religion Spirituality and Health The
Research and Clinical Implications
bull - Koenig Harold G Religion spirituality and health The research and clinical implications International
Scholarly Research Notices 2012 (2012) اعالمیه های بین المللی تحقیقات علمی
43
1 Historical Background and Introduction
bull Religion medicine and healthcare have been related in one way or another in all population groups since the beginning of recorded history
44
bull Only in recent times have these systems of healing been separated
bull and this separation has occurred largely in highly developed nations
bull in many developing countries there is little or no such separation
45
bull The history of religion medicine and healthcare in developed countries of the West though is a fascinating one
bull The first hospitals in the West for the care of the sick in the general population were built by religious organizations and staffed by religious orders
46
bull Throughout the Middle Ages and up through the French Revolution physicians were often clergy
bull For hundreds of years in fact religious institutions were responsible for licensing physicians to practice medicine
bull In the American colonies in particular many of the clergy were also physiciansmdashoften as a second job that helped to supplement their meager income from church work
47
bull Care for those with mental health problems in the West also had its roots within monasteries and religious communities [2]
bull In 1247 the Priory of St Mary of Bethlehem was built in London on the Thames River [3]
48
bull Originally designed to house ldquodistracted peoplerdquo this was Europersquos (and perhaps the worldrsquos) first mental hospital
bull In 1547 however St Maryrsquos was torn down and replaced by Bethlehem or Bethlem Hospital [4]
49
bull Over the years as secular authorities took control over the institution the hospital became famous for its inhumane treatment of the mentally ill who were often chained [5]thinspdunked in water or beaten as necessary to control them
bull In later years an admission fee (2 pence) was charged to the general public to observe the patients abusing themselves or other patients [4]
50
bull The hospital eventually became known as ldquobedlamrdquo (from which comes the word used today to indicate a state of confusion and disarray)
51
bull In response to the abuses in mental hospitals and precipitated by the death of a Quaker patient in New York asylum in England an English merchant and devout Quaker named William Tuke began to promote a new form of treatment of the mentally ill called ldquomoral treatmentrdquo
52
bull In 1796 he and the Quaker community in England established their own asylum known as the York Retreat [6]
53
bull Not long after this the Quakers brought moral treatment to America where it became the dominant form of psychiatric care in that country [6]
54
bull Established in Philadelphia by the Quakers in 1813 ldquoFriends Hospitalrdquo (or Friends Asylum) became the first private institution in the United States dedicated solely to the care of those with mental illness [7]
55
bull Psychiatric hospitals that followed in the footsteps of Friends Asylum were the McLean Hospital (established in 1818 in Boston and now associated with Harvard) the Bloomingdale Asylum (established in 1821 in New York) and the Hartford Retreat (established in 1824 in Connecticut)mdashall modeled after the York Retreat and implementing moral treatment as the dominant therapy
56
bull It was not until modern times that religion and psychiatry began to part paths
bull This separation was encouraged by the psychiatrist Sigmund Freud
57
bull After being ldquointroducedrdquo to the neurotic and hysterical aspects of religion by the famous French neurologist Jean Charcot in the mid-1880s
bull Freud began to emphasize this in a widely read series of publications from 1907 through his death in 1939
58
bull These writings left a legacy that would influence the practice of psychiatrymdashespecially psychotherapymdashfor the rest of the century
bull and lead to a true schism between religion and mental health care
59
bull That schism was illustrated in 1993 by a systematic review of the religious content of DSM-III-R which found nearly one-quarter of all cases of mental illness being described using religious illustrations [12]
60
bull The conflict has continued to the present day Consider recent e-letters in response to two articles published in The Psychiatristthinspabout this topic [13 14] and an even more recent debate about the role of prayer in psychiatric practice [15]
61
bull This conflict has manifested in the clinical work of many mental health professionals who have generally ignored the religious resources of patients or viewed them as pathological
62
bull Consider that a recent national survey of US psychiatrists found that 56 said they never rarely or only sometimes inquire about religiousspiritual issues in patients with depression or anxiety [16]
63
![Page 8: Religion, Spirituality, and Health · Review Article •Religion, Spirituality, and Health: • The Research and Clinical Implications • - Koenig, Harold G. "Religion, spirituality,](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022062605/5fcb0bcd7925581572559072/html5/thumbnails/8.jpg)
In addition
bull to health care interventions and a persons surroundings a number of other factors are known to influence the health status of individuals including their background lifestyle and economic social conditions and spirituality these are referred to as determinants of healthldquo
bull Studies have shown that high levels of stress can affect your health[8]
8
جالب است توجه شودکه
دهنده ارائه 2600 حدود در آمریکا متحده ایالت در حاضر حال درbull موسسات روانی بیمارستانهای عمومی بیمارستانهای در معنوی مراقبت هستند شاغل تسکین مراقبتی واحدهای و مدت طوالنی مراقبتی
در معنوی مراقبت دهندگان ارائه از تن ها ده حاضر حال در همچنین bull شبکه یک و هستند کار به مشغول اسرائیل در درمان و بهداشت سیستم
(1)دارد وجود(نیز) سازمانی عضو 21 بر مشتمل معنوی مراقبت
bull 1 Spiritual care in hospitals and other healthcare settings in Israel-a profession in the making[Article in Hebrew]Bar-Sela G Bentur N Schultz M Corn BW PMID25112121[PubMed]
9
(8قانون 22یا 16 ص 1 اعظم جاكسیر ) قوانین عالج
است حیوانى و نفسانى قواى مقویات به استعانت نافعه جیده معالجات از که بدان عارض را یکدیگر آنچه از گردد مى منفعل بدن و نفس از واحد هر که نیست پوشیده و
شودعالج این پس باشد درجه این به بدن در نفسانى امور تأثیر هرگاه و
باشد نافع بالضرور روحانى
10
بنابراین چرایی ما از ارائه این مقاله
از بیماران سالمتی در معنویت مقوله اهمیت و نقش ماندن مغفول -1bull پزشکان بویژه درمان كادر جانب
كادر در حد چه تا معنویت مقوله به پرداختن ضرورت و اهمیت -2bull
شود می احساس درمان
به نسبت ما درمانی مراكز در معنوی مراقبتهای ارائه وضعیت -3bull است حد چه تا آمریکا و غربی كشورهای
با حد چه تا سنتی طب بویژه پزشکی های رشته دانشجویان و اساتید-4bull
را آن حد چه تا یا و دارند آشنایی معنوی های مراقبت آموزشهای گیرند می بکار
11
و باالخره
بلکه نیست کالب ژورنال عنوان به تکلیف یک ارائه تنها هدفbull را آن ما کشور درمان و بهداشت سیستم بشدت که است نیازی
است مرتبط کامال نیز نظام کلی سیاستهای با و کند می احساس
به توجه با -نیاز این رفع و حرکت این شروع که است امید وbull طب عزیز دانشجویان و اساتید در بیشتر معنوی پتانسیل
(اهلل شاء ان)بگیرد شکل حوزه این از - (اهلل بحمد )سنتی
12
محدویت
همه به پرداختن اجازه شاید وقت کمی و مقاله زیاد حجم به توجه باbull باشد نداشته وجود راهبردی و کاربردی مقاله این مهم موضوعات
مستمعین به هم متعال خداوند که کنیم می دعا ابتدا همین در بنابراینbull
این حقیر بنده این به هم و فرماید عنایت را کافی حوصله و صبر ما عزیز برسانم جایی به را بحث مقرر موعد در بتوانم که بدهد را توانایی و توفیق
(اهلل شاء ان)
صالحدید صورت در کشید درازا به بحث اگر که شود می پیشنهاد البتهbull شود گذاشته بحث به موضوع دیگری جلسه در عزیز سروران شما
13
در ضمن
سروران شما متانت و حوصله و صبر از پیشاپیش bull دارم را تشکر و تقدیر كمال گرامی
14
Harold G Koenig MD MHSc Professor of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences
Associate Professor of Medicine Department Division
Psychiatry Geriatric Behavioral Health
15
Training
bull MD MHSc University of CaliforniandashSan Francisco School of Medicine 1982
bull Residency
bull Psychiatry Duke University Medical Center 1989-1992 1991-1992
bull Fellowship
bull Geropsychiatry Duke University Medical Center 1991-1992
16
bull He is currently director of Dukes Center for the Study of ReligionSpirituality and Health
17
Publications Books bull Koenig has authored or edited more than 35 books[1] that
include bull Is religion good for your health The effects of religion on physical
and mental health Harold G Koenig (1997 New York Haworth Pastoral Press)
bull Handbook of religion and mental health Harold G Koenig (1998 New York Academic Press)
bull Handbook of religion and health (see article) Harold G Koenig Michael E McCullough amp David B Larson (2001 New York Oxford University Press)
18
Research bull Koenig has published over 280 scientific articles in
bull peer-reviewed journals bull scholarly professional journal articles
bull and 60 chapters in professional books[1]
bull HIndex=58
19
20
Abstract
bull This paper provides a concise but comprehensive review of research on religionspirituality (RS) and both mental health and physical health
21
It is based on
bull a systematic review of original data-based quantitative research published in peer-reviewed journals between 1872 and 2010 including a few seminal articles published since 2010
22
First
bull I provide a brief historical background to set the stage
bull Then I review research on RS and mental health examining relationships with both positive and negative mental health outcomes
23
where positive outcomes
bull include
bull well-being
bull happiness
bull hope
bull optimism
bull and gratefulness
24
and negative outcomes
bull Involve bull depression bull suicide bull anxiety bull psychosis bull substance abuse bull delinquencycrime bull marital instability bull and personality traits (positive and negative)
25
bull I then explain how and why RS might influence mental health
26
Next I review research on RS and health behaviors such as
bull physical activity
bull cigarette smoking
bull diet
bull and sexual practices
27
followed by a review of relationships between RS and
1 heart disease 2 hypertension 3 cerebrovascular disease 4 Alzheimers disease and dementia 5 immune functions 6 endocrine functions 7 cancer 8 overall mortality 9 physical disability 10 pain and somatic symptoms
28
I then present
bull a theoretical model explaining how RS might influence physical health
29
Finally bull I discuss what health professionals should do in
light of these research findings and make recommendations in this regard
30
31
سر تیترها
فهرست مطالب بطور کاملتر شامل موارد ذیل می باشندbull
32
4 Religion Spirituality and Mental Health
bull 41 Coping with Adversity
bull 42 Positive Emotions
bull 421 Well-BeingHappiness
bull 422 Hope
bull 423 Optimism
bull 424 Meaning and Purpose
bull 425 Self-Esteem
bull 426 Sense of Control
bull 427 Positive Character Traits 33
and negative outcomes
bull 43 Depression
bull 44 Suicide
bull 45 Anxiety
bull 46 Psychotic DisorderSchizophrenia
bull 47 Bipolar Disorder
bull 48 Personality Traits
bull 49 Substance Abuse
bull 410 Social Problems
bull 4101 DelinquencyCrime
bull 4102 Marital Instability
bull 4103 Social Support
bull 4104 Social Capitalسرمایه اجتماعی
34
bull 5 Explaining the Relationship RS and Mental Health
35
6 Religion Spirituality and Health Behaviors
bull 61 Cigarette Smoking
bull 62 Exercise
bull 63 Diet
bull 64 Weight
bull 65 Sexual Behavior
36
7 Religion Spirituality and Physical Health
bull 71 Coronary Heart Disease (CHD) bull 72 Hypertension bull 73 Cerebrovascular Disease bull 74 Alzheimerrsquos Disease and Dementia bull 75 Immune Function bull 76 Endocrine Function bull 77 Cancer bull 78 Physical Functioning bull 79 Self-Rated Health مراقبتی خود
bull 710 Pain and Somatic Symptoms bull 711 Mortality
37
8 Explaining the Relationship RS and Physical Health
bull 81 Psychological
bull 82 Social
bull 83 Health Behaviors
bull 84 Other Pathways
38
9 Clinical Implications
bull 91 Rationale for Integrating Spirituality
bull 92 How to Integrate Spirituality into Patient Care
bull 10 Conclusions
39
bull Conflict of Interests
bull Acknowledgment
bull References 601
40
bull The support to write this paper was provided in part by the John Templeton Foundation
41
bull - Koenig Harold G Religion spirituality and health The research and clinical implications
International Scholarly Research Notices 2012 (2012) اعالمیه های بین المللی تحقیقات علمی
42
Review Article bull Religion Spirituality and Health The
Research and Clinical Implications
bull - Koenig Harold G Religion spirituality and health The research and clinical implications International
Scholarly Research Notices 2012 (2012) اعالمیه های بین المللی تحقیقات علمی
43
1 Historical Background and Introduction
bull Religion medicine and healthcare have been related in one way or another in all population groups since the beginning of recorded history
44
bull Only in recent times have these systems of healing been separated
bull and this separation has occurred largely in highly developed nations
bull in many developing countries there is little or no such separation
45
bull The history of religion medicine and healthcare in developed countries of the West though is a fascinating one
bull The first hospitals in the West for the care of the sick in the general population were built by religious organizations and staffed by religious orders
46
bull Throughout the Middle Ages and up through the French Revolution physicians were often clergy
bull For hundreds of years in fact religious institutions were responsible for licensing physicians to practice medicine
bull In the American colonies in particular many of the clergy were also physiciansmdashoften as a second job that helped to supplement their meager income from church work
47
bull Care for those with mental health problems in the West also had its roots within monasteries and religious communities [2]
bull In 1247 the Priory of St Mary of Bethlehem was built in London on the Thames River [3]
48
bull Originally designed to house ldquodistracted peoplerdquo this was Europersquos (and perhaps the worldrsquos) first mental hospital
bull In 1547 however St Maryrsquos was torn down and replaced by Bethlehem or Bethlem Hospital [4]
49
bull Over the years as secular authorities took control over the institution the hospital became famous for its inhumane treatment of the mentally ill who were often chained [5]thinspdunked in water or beaten as necessary to control them
bull In later years an admission fee (2 pence) was charged to the general public to observe the patients abusing themselves or other patients [4]
50
bull The hospital eventually became known as ldquobedlamrdquo (from which comes the word used today to indicate a state of confusion and disarray)
51
bull In response to the abuses in mental hospitals and precipitated by the death of a Quaker patient in New York asylum in England an English merchant and devout Quaker named William Tuke began to promote a new form of treatment of the mentally ill called ldquomoral treatmentrdquo
52
bull In 1796 he and the Quaker community in England established their own asylum known as the York Retreat [6]
53
bull Not long after this the Quakers brought moral treatment to America where it became the dominant form of psychiatric care in that country [6]
54
bull Established in Philadelphia by the Quakers in 1813 ldquoFriends Hospitalrdquo (or Friends Asylum) became the first private institution in the United States dedicated solely to the care of those with mental illness [7]
55
bull Psychiatric hospitals that followed in the footsteps of Friends Asylum were the McLean Hospital (established in 1818 in Boston and now associated with Harvard) the Bloomingdale Asylum (established in 1821 in New York) and the Hartford Retreat (established in 1824 in Connecticut)mdashall modeled after the York Retreat and implementing moral treatment as the dominant therapy
56
bull It was not until modern times that religion and psychiatry began to part paths
bull This separation was encouraged by the psychiatrist Sigmund Freud
57
bull After being ldquointroducedrdquo to the neurotic and hysterical aspects of religion by the famous French neurologist Jean Charcot in the mid-1880s
bull Freud began to emphasize this in a widely read series of publications from 1907 through his death in 1939
58
bull These writings left a legacy that would influence the practice of psychiatrymdashespecially psychotherapymdashfor the rest of the century
bull and lead to a true schism between religion and mental health care
59
bull That schism was illustrated in 1993 by a systematic review of the religious content of DSM-III-R which found nearly one-quarter of all cases of mental illness being described using religious illustrations [12]
60
bull The conflict has continued to the present day Consider recent e-letters in response to two articles published in The Psychiatristthinspabout this topic [13 14] and an even more recent debate about the role of prayer in psychiatric practice [15]
61
bull This conflict has manifested in the clinical work of many mental health professionals who have generally ignored the religious resources of patients or viewed them as pathological
62
bull Consider that a recent national survey of US psychiatrists found that 56 said they never rarely or only sometimes inquire about religiousspiritual issues in patients with depression or anxiety [16]
63
![Page 9: Religion, Spirituality, and Health · Review Article •Religion, Spirituality, and Health: • The Research and Clinical Implications • - Koenig, Harold G. "Religion, spirituality,](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022062605/5fcb0bcd7925581572559072/html5/thumbnails/9.jpg)
جالب است توجه شودکه
دهنده ارائه 2600 حدود در آمریکا متحده ایالت در حاضر حال درbull موسسات روانی بیمارستانهای عمومی بیمارستانهای در معنوی مراقبت هستند شاغل تسکین مراقبتی واحدهای و مدت طوالنی مراقبتی
در معنوی مراقبت دهندگان ارائه از تن ها ده حاضر حال در همچنین bull شبکه یک و هستند کار به مشغول اسرائیل در درمان و بهداشت سیستم
(1)دارد وجود(نیز) سازمانی عضو 21 بر مشتمل معنوی مراقبت
bull 1 Spiritual care in hospitals and other healthcare settings in Israel-a profession in the making[Article in Hebrew]Bar-Sela G Bentur N Schultz M Corn BW PMID25112121[PubMed]
9
(8قانون 22یا 16 ص 1 اعظم جاكسیر ) قوانین عالج
است حیوانى و نفسانى قواى مقویات به استعانت نافعه جیده معالجات از که بدان عارض را یکدیگر آنچه از گردد مى منفعل بدن و نفس از واحد هر که نیست پوشیده و
شودعالج این پس باشد درجه این به بدن در نفسانى امور تأثیر هرگاه و
باشد نافع بالضرور روحانى
10
بنابراین چرایی ما از ارائه این مقاله
از بیماران سالمتی در معنویت مقوله اهمیت و نقش ماندن مغفول -1bull پزشکان بویژه درمان كادر جانب
كادر در حد چه تا معنویت مقوله به پرداختن ضرورت و اهمیت -2bull
شود می احساس درمان
به نسبت ما درمانی مراكز در معنوی مراقبتهای ارائه وضعیت -3bull است حد چه تا آمریکا و غربی كشورهای
با حد چه تا سنتی طب بویژه پزشکی های رشته دانشجویان و اساتید-4bull
را آن حد چه تا یا و دارند آشنایی معنوی های مراقبت آموزشهای گیرند می بکار
11
و باالخره
بلکه نیست کالب ژورنال عنوان به تکلیف یک ارائه تنها هدفbull را آن ما کشور درمان و بهداشت سیستم بشدت که است نیازی
است مرتبط کامال نیز نظام کلی سیاستهای با و کند می احساس
به توجه با -نیاز این رفع و حرکت این شروع که است امید وbull طب عزیز دانشجویان و اساتید در بیشتر معنوی پتانسیل
(اهلل شاء ان)بگیرد شکل حوزه این از - (اهلل بحمد )سنتی
12
محدویت
همه به پرداختن اجازه شاید وقت کمی و مقاله زیاد حجم به توجه باbull باشد نداشته وجود راهبردی و کاربردی مقاله این مهم موضوعات
مستمعین به هم متعال خداوند که کنیم می دعا ابتدا همین در بنابراینbull
این حقیر بنده این به هم و فرماید عنایت را کافی حوصله و صبر ما عزیز برسانم جایی به را بحث مقرر موعد در بتوانم که بدهد را توانایی و توفیق
(اهلل شاء ان)
صالحدید صورت در کشید درازا به بحث اگر که شود می پیشنهاد البتهbull شود گذاشته بحث به موضوع دیگری جلسه در عزیز سروران شما
13
در ضمن
سروران شما متانت و حوصله و صبر از پیشاپیش bull دارم را تشکر و تقدیر كمال گرامی
14
Harold G Koenig MD MHSc Professor of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences
Associate Professor of Medicine Department Division
Psychiatry Geriatric Behavioral Health
15
Training
bull MD MHSc University of CaliforniandashSan Francisco School of Medicine 1982
bull Residency
bull Psychiatry Duke University Medical Center 1989-1992 1991-1992
bull Fellowship
bull Geropsychiatry Duke University Medical Center 1991-1992
16
bull He is currently director of Dukes Center for the Study of ReligionSpirituality and Health
17
Publications Books bull Koenig has authored or edited more than 35 books[1] that
include bull Is religion good for your health The effects of religion on physical
and mental health Harold G Koenig (1997 New York Haworth Pastoral Press)
bull Handbook of religion and mental health Harold G Koenig (1998 New York Academic Press)
bull Handbook of religion and health (see article) Harold G Koenig Michael E McCullough amp David B Larson (2001 New York Oxford University Press)
18
Research bull Koenig has published over 280 scientific articles in
bull peer-reviewed journals bull scholarly professional journal articles
bull and 60 chapters in professional books[1]
bull HIndex=58
19
20
Abstract
bull This paper provides a concise but comprehensive review of research on religionspirituality (RS) and both mental health and physical health
21
It is based on
bull a systematic review of original data-based quantitative research published in peer-reviewed journals between 1872 and 2010 including a few seminal articles published since 2010
22
First
bull I provide a brief historical background to set the stage
bull Then I review research on RS and mental health examining relationships with both positive and negative mental health outcomes
23
where positive outcomes
bull include
bull well-being
bull happiness
bull hope
bull optimism
bull and gratefulness
24
and negative outcomes
bull Involve bull depression bull suicide bull anxiety bull psychosis bull substance abuse bull delinquencycrime bull marital instability bull and personality traits (positive and negative)
25
bull I then explain how and why RS might influence mental health
26
Next I review research on RS and health behaviors such as
bull physical activity
bull cigarette smoking
bull diet
bull and sexual practices
27
followed by a review of relationships between RS and
1 heart disease 2 hypertension 3 cerebrovascular disease 4 Alzheimers disease and dementia 5 immune functions 6 endocrine functions 7 cancer 8 overall mortality 9 physical disability 10 pain and somatic symptoms
28
I then present
bull a theoretical model explaining how RS might influence physical health
29
Finally bull I discuss what health professionals should do in
light of these research findings and make recommendations in this regard
30
31
سر تیترها
فهرست مطالب بطور کاملتر شامل موارد ذیل می باشندbull
32
4 Religion Spirituality and Mental Health
bull 41 Coping with Adversity
bull 42 Positive Emotions
bull 421 Well-BeingHappiness
bull 422 Hope
bull 423 Optimism
bull 424 Meaning and Purpose
bull 425 Self-Esteem
bull 426 Sense of Control
bull 427 Positive Character Traits 33
and negative outcomes
bull 43 Depression
bull 44 Suicide
bull 45 Anxiety
bull 46 Psychotic DisorderSchizophrenia
bull 47 Bipolar Disorder
bull 48 Personality Traits
bull 49 Substance Abuse
bull 410 Social Problems
bull 4101 DelinquencyCrime
bull 4102 Marital Instability
bull 4103 Social Support
bull 4104 Social Capitalسرمایه اجتماعی
34
bull 5 Explaining the Relationship RS and Mental Health
35
6 Religion Spirituality and Health Behaviors
bull 61 Cigarette Smoking
bull 62 Exercise
bull 63 Diet
bull 64 Weight
bull 65 Sexual Behavior
36
7 Religion Spirituality and Physical Health
bull 71 Coronary Heart Disease (CHD) bull 72 Hypertension bull 73 Cerebrovascular Disease bull 74 Alzheimerrsquos Disease and Dementia bull 75 Immune Function bull 76 Endocrine Function bull 77 Cancer bull 78 Physical Functioning bull 79 Self-Rated Health مراقبتی خود
bull 710 Pain and Somatic Symptoms bull 711 Mortality
37
8 Explaining the Relationship RS and Physical Health
bull 81 Psychological
bull 82 Social
bull 83 Health Behaviors
bull 84 Other Pathways
38
9 Clinical Implications
bull 91 Rationale for Integrating Spirituality
bull 92 How to Integrate Spirituality into Patient Care
bull 10 Conclusions
39
bull Conflict of Interests
bull Acknowledgment
bull References 601
40
bull The support to write this paper was provided in part by the John Templeton Foundation
41
bull - Koenig Harold G Religion spirituality and health The research and clinical implications
International Scholarly Research Notices 2012 (2012) اعالمیه های بین المللی تحقیقات علمی
42
Review Article bull Religion Spirituality and Health The
Research and Clinical Implications
bull - Koenig Harold G Religion spirituality and health The research and clinical implications International
Scholarly Research Notices 2012 (2012) اعالمیه های بین المللی تحقیقات علمی
43
1 Historical Background and Introduction
bull Religion medicine and healthcare have been related in one way or another in all population groups since the beginning of recorded history
44
bull Only in recent times have these systems of healing been separated
bull and this separation has occurred largely in highly developed nations
bull in many developing countries there is little or no such separation
45
bull The history of religion medicine and healthcare in developed countries of the West though is a fascinating one
bull The first hospitals in the West for the care of the sick in the general population were built by religious organizations and staffed by religious orders
46
bull Throughout the Middle Ages and up through the French Revolution physicians were often clergy
bull For hundreds of years in fact religious institutions were responsible for licensing physicians to practice medicine
bull In the American colonies in particular many of the clergy were also physiciansmdashoften as a second job that helped to supplement their meager income from church work
47
bull Care for those with mental health problems in the West also had its roots within monasteries and religious communities [2]
bull In 1247 the Priory of St Mary of Bethlehem was built in London on the Thames River [3]
48
bull Originally designed to house ldquodistracted peoplerdquo this was Europersquos (and perhaps the worldrsquos) first mental hospital
bull In 1547 however St Maryrsquos was torn down and replaced by Bethlehem or Bethlem Hospital [4]
49
bull Over the years as secular authorities took control over the institution the hospital became famous for its inhumane treatment of the mentally ill who were often chained [5]thinspdunked in water or beaten as necessary to control them
bull In later years an admission fee (2 pence) was charged to the general public to observe the patients abusing themselves or other patients [4]
50
bull The hospital eventually became known as ldquobedlamrdquo (from which comes the word used today to indicate a state of confusion and disarray)
51
bull In response to the abuses in mental hospitals and precipitated by the death of a Quaker patient in New York asylum in England an English merchant and devout Quaker named William Tuke began to promote a new form of treatment of the mentally ill called ldquomoral treatmentrdquo
52
bull In 1796 he and the Quaker community in England established their own asylum known as the York Retreat [6]
53
bull Not long after this the Quakers brought moral treatment to America where it became the dominant form of psychiatric care in that country [6]
54
bull Established in Philadelphia by the Quakers in 1813 ldquoFriends Hospitalrdquo (or Friends Asylum) became the first private institution in the United States dedicated solely to the care of those with mental illness [7]
55
bull Psychiatric hospitals that followed in the footsteps of Friends Asylum were the McLean Hospital (established in 1818 in Boston and now associated with Harvard) the Bloomingdale Asylum (established in 1821 in New York) and the Hartford Retreat (established in 1824 in Connecticut)mdashall modeled after the York Retreat and implementing moral treatment as the dominant therapy
56
bull It was not until modern times that religion and psychiatry began to part paths
bull This separation was encouraged by the psychiatrist Sigmund Freud
57
bull After being ldquointroducedrdquo to the neurotic and hysterical aspects of religion by the famous French neurologist Jean Charcot in the mid-1880s
bull Freud began to emphasize this in a widely read series of publications from 1907 through his death in 1939
58
bull These writings left a legacy that would influence the practice of psychiatrymdashespecially psychotherapymdashfor the rest of the century
bull and lead to a true schism between religion and mental health care
59
bull That schism was illustrated in 1993 by a systematic review of the religious content of DSM-III-R which found nearly one-quarter of all cases of mental illness being described using religious illustrations [12]
60
bull The conflict has continued to the present day Consider recent e-letters in response to two articles published in The Psychiatristthinspabout this topic [13 14] and an even more recent debate about the role of prayer in psychiatric practice [15]
61
bull This conflict has manifested in the clinical work of many mental health professionals who have generally ignored the religious resources of patients or viewed them as pathological
62
bull Consider that a recent national survey of US psychiatrists found that 56 said they never rarely or only sometimes inquire about religiousspiritual issues in patients with depression or anxiety [16]
63
![Page 10: Religion, Spirituality, and Health · Review Article •Religion, Spirituality, and Health: • The Research and Clinical Implications • - Koenig, Harold G. "Religion, spirituality,](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022062605/5fcb0bcd7925581572559072/html5/thumbnails/10.jpg)
(8قانون 22یا 16 ص 1 اعظم جاكسیر ) قوانین عالج
است حیوانى و نفسانى قواى مقویات به استعانت نافعه جیده معالجات از که بدان عارض را یکدیگر آنچه از گردد مى منفعل بدن و نفس از واحد هر که نیست پوشیده و
شودعالج این پس باشد درجه این به بدن در نفسانى امور تأثیر هرگاه و
باشد نافع بالضرور روحانى
10
بنابراین چرایی ما از ارائه این مقاله
از بیماران سالمتی در معنویت مقوله اهمیت و نقش ماندن مغفول -1bull پزشکان بویژه درمان كادر جانب
كادر در حد چه تا معنویت مقوله به پرداختن ضرورت و اهمیت -2bull
شود می احساس درمان
به نسبت ما درمانی مراكز در معنوی مراقبتهای ارائه وضعیت -3bull است حد چه تا آمریکا و غربی كشورهای
با حد چه تا سنتی طب بویژه پزشکی های رشته دانشجویان و اساتید-4bull
را آن حد چه تا یا و دارند آشنایی معنوی های مراقبت آموزشهای گیرند می بکار
11
و باالخره
بلکه نیست کالب ژورنال عنوان به تکلیف یک ارائه تنها هدفbull را آن ما کشور درمان و بهداشت سیستم بشدت که است نیازی
است مرتبط کامال نیز نظام کلی سیاستهای با و کند می احساس
به توجه با -نیاز این رفع و حرکت این شروع که است امید وbull طب عزیز دانشجویان و اساتید در بیشتر معنوی پتانسیل
(اهلل شاء ان)بگیرد شکل حوزه این از - (اهلل بحمد )سنتی
12
محدویت
همه به پرداختن اجازه شاید وقت کمی و مقاله زیاد حجم به توجه باbull باشد نداشته وجود راهبردی و کاربردی مقاله این مهم موضوعات
مستمعین به هم متعال خداوند که کنیم می دعا ابتدا همین در بنابراینbull
این حقیر بنده این به هم و فرماید عنایت را کافی حوصله و صبر ما عزیز برسانم جایی به را بحث مقرر موعد در بتوانم که بدهد را توانایی و توفیق
(اهلل شاء ان)
صالحدید صورت در کشید درازا به بحث اگر که شود می پیشنهاد البتهbull شود گذاشته بحث به موضوع دیگری جلسه در عزیز سروران شما
13
در ضمن
سروران شما متانت و حوصله و صبر از پیشاپیش bull دارم را تشکر و تقدیر كمال گرامی
14
Harold G Koenig MD MHSc Professor of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences
Associate Professor of Medicine Department Division
Psychiatry Geriatric Behavioral Health
15
Training
bull MD MHSc University of CaliforniandashSan Francisco School of Medicine 1982
bull Residency
bull Psychiatry Duke University Medical Center 1989-1992 1991-1992
bull Fellowship
bull Geropsychiatry Duke University Medical Center 1991-1992
16
bull He is currently director of Dukes Center for the Study of ReligionSpirituality and Health
17
Publications Books bull Koenig has authored or edited more than 35 books[1] that
include bull Is religion good for your health The effects of religion on physical
and mental health Harold G Koenig (1997 New York Haworth Pastoral Press)
bull Handbook of religion and mental health Harold G Koenig (1998 New York Academic Press)
bull Handbook of religion and health (see article) Harold G Koenig Michael E McCullough amp David B Larson (2001 New York Oxford University Press)
18
Research bull Koenig has published over 280 scientific articles in
bull peer-reviewed journals bull scholarly professional journal articles
bull and 60 chapters in professional books[1]
bull HIndex=58
19
20
Abstract
bull This paper provides a concise but comprehensive review of research on religionspirituality (RS) and both mental health and physical health
21
It is based on
bull a systematic review of original data-based quantitative research published in peer-reviewed journals between 1872 and 2010 including a few seminal articles published since 2010
22
First
bull I provide a brief historical background to set the stage
bull Then I review research on RS and mental health examining relationships with both positive and negative mental health outcomes
23
where positive outcomes
bull include
bull well-being
bull happiness
bull hope
bull optimism
bull and gratefulness
24
and negative outcomes
bull Involve bull depression bull suicide bull anxiety bull psychosis bull substance abuse bull delinquencycrime bull marital instability bull and personality traits (positive and negative)
25
bull I then explain how and why RS might influence mental health
26
Next I review research on RS and health behaviors such as
bull physical activity
bull cigarette smoking
bull diet
bull and sexual practices
27
followed by a review of relationships between RS and
1 heart disease 2 hypertension 3 cerebrovascular disease 4 Alzheimers disease and dementia 5 immune functions 6 endocrine functions 7 cancer 8 overall mortality 9 physical disability 10 pain and somatic symptoms
28
I then present
bull a theoretical model explaining how RS might influence physical health
29
Finally bull I discuss what health professionals should do in
light of these research findings and make recommendations in this regard
30
31
سر تیترها
فهرست مطالب بطور کاملتر شامل موارد ذیل می باشندbull
32
4 Religion Spirituality and Mental Health
bull 41 Coping with Adversity
bull 42 Positive Emotions
bull 421 Well-BeingHappiness
bull 422 Hope
bull 423 Optimism
bull 424 Meaning and Purpose
bull 425 Self-Esteem
bull 426 Sense of Control
bull 427 Positive Character Traits 33
and negative outcomes
bull 43 Depression
bull 44 Suicide
bull 45 Anxiety
bull 46 Psychotic DisorderSchizophrenia
bull 47 Bipolar Disorder
bull 48 Personality Traits
bull 49 Substance Abuse
bull 410 Social Problems
bull 4101 DelinquencyCrime
bull 4102 Marital Instability
bull 4103 Social Support
bull 4104 Social Capitalسرمایه اجتماعی
34
bull 5 Explaining the Relationship RS and Mental Health
35
6 Religion Spirituality and Health Behaviors
bull 61 Cigarette Smoking
bull 62 Exercise
bull 63 Diet
bull 64 Weight
bull 65 Sexual Behavior
36
7 Religion Spirituality and Physical Health
bull 71 Coronary Heart Disease (CHD) bull 72 Hypertension bull 73 Cerebrovascular Disease bull 74 Alzheimerrsquos Disease and Dementia bull 75 Immune Function bull 76 Endocrine Function bull 77 Cancer bull 78 Physical Functioning bull 79 Self-Rated Health مراقبتی خود
bull 710 Pain and Somatic Symptoms bull 711 Mortality
37
8 Explaining the Relationship RS and Physical Health
bull 81 Psychological
bull 82 Social
bull 83 Health Behaviors
bull 84 Other Pathways
38
9 Clinical Implications
bull 91 Rationale for Integrating Spirituality
bull 92 How to Integrate Spirituality into Patient Care
bull 10 Conclusions
39
bull Conflict of Interests
bull Acknowledgment
bull References 601
40
bull The support to write this paper was provided in part by the John Templeton Foundation
41
bull - Koenig Harold G Religion spirituality and health The research and clinical implications
International Scholarly Research Notices 2012 (2012) اعالمیه های بین المللی تحقیقات علمی
42
Review Article bull Religion Spirituality and Health The
Research and Clinical Implications
bull - Koenig Harold G Religion spirituality and health The research and clinical implications International
Scholarly Research Notices 2012 (2012) اعالمیه های بین المللی تحقیقات علمی
43
1 Historical Background and Introduction
bull Religion medicine and healthcare have been related in one way or another in all population groups since the beginning of recorded history
44
bull Only in recent times have these systems of healing been separated
bull and this separation has occurred largely in highly developed nations
bull in many developing countries there is little or no such separation
45
bull The history of religion medicine and healthcare in developed countries of the West though is a fascinating one
bull The first hospitals in the West for the care of the sick in the general population were built by religious organizations and staffed by religious orders
46
bull Throughout the Middle Ages and up through the French Revolution physicians were often clergy
bull For hundreds of years in fact religious institutions were responsible for licensing physicians to practice medicine
bull In the American colonies in particular many of the clergy were also physiciansmdashoften as a second job that helped to supplement their meager income from church work
47
bull Care for those with mental health problems in the West also had its roots within monasteries and religious communities [2]
bull In 1247 the Priory of St Mary of Bethlehem was built in London on the Thames River [3]
48
bull Originally designed to house ldquodistracted peoplerdquo this was Europersquos (and perhaps the worldrsquos) first mental hospital
bull In 1547 however St Maryrsquos was torn down and replaced by Bethlehem or Bethlem Hospital [4]
49
bull Over the years as secular authorities took control over the institution the hospital became famous for its inhumane treatment of the mentally ill who were often chained [5]thinspdunked in water or beaten as necessary to control them
bull In later years an admission fee (2 pence) was charged to the general public to observe the patients abusing themselves or other patients [4]
50
bull The hospital eventually became known as ldquobedlamrdquo (from which comes the word used today to indicate a state of confusion and disarray)
51
bull In response to the abuses in mental hospitals and precipitated by the death of a Quaker patient in New York asylum in England an English merchant and devout Quaker named William Tuke began to promote a new form of treatment of the mentally ill called ldquomoral treatmentrdquo
52
bull In 1796 he and the Quaker community in England established their own asylum known as the York Retreat [6]
53
bull Not long after this the Quakers brought moral treatment to America where it became the dominant form of psychiatric care in that country [6]
54
bull Established in Philadelphia by the Quakers in 1813 ldquoFriends Hospitalrdquo (or Friends Asylum) became the first private institution in the United States dedicated solely to the care of those with mental illness [7]
55
bull Psychiatric hospitals that followed in the footsteps of Friends Asylum were the McLean Hospital (established in 1818 in Boston and now associated with Harvard) the Bloomingdale Asylum (established in 1821 in New York) and the Hartford Retreat (established in 1824 in Connecticut)mdashall modeled after the York Retreat and implementing moral treatment as the dominant therapy
56
bull It was not until modern times that religion and psychiatry began to part paths
bull This separation was encouraged by the psychiatrist Sigmund Freud
57
bull After being ldquointroducedrdquo to the neurotic and hysterical aspects of religion by the famous French neurologist Jean Charcot in the mid-1880s
bull Freud began to emphasize this in a widely read series of publications from 1907 through his death in 1939
58
bull These writings left a legacy that would influence the practice of psychiatrymdashespecially psychotherapymdashfor the rest of the century
bull and lead to a true schism between religion and mental health care
59
bull That schism was illustrated in 1993 by a systematic review of the religious content of DSM-III-R which found nearly one-quarter of all cases of mental illness being described using religious illustrations [12]
60
bull The conflict has continued to the present day Consider recent e-letters in response to two articles published in The Psychiatristthinspabout this topic [13 14] and an even more recent debate about the role of prayer in psychiatric practice [15]
61
bull This conflict has manifested in the clinical work of many mental health professionals who have generally ignored the religious resources of patients or viewed them as pathological
62
bull Consider that a recent national survey of US psychiatrists found that 56 said they never rarely or only sometimes inquire about religiousspiritual issues in patients with depression or anxiety [16]
63
![Page 11: Religion, Spirituality, and Health · Review Article •Religion, Spirituality, and Health: • The Research and Clinical Implications • - Koenig, Harold G. "Religion, spirituality,](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022062605/5fcb0bcd7925581572559072/html5/thumbnails/11.jpg)
بنابراین چرایی ما از ارائه این مقاله
از بیماران سالمتی در معنویت مقوله اهمیت و نقش ماندن مغفول -1bull پزشکان بویژه درمان كادر جانب
كادر در حد چه تا معنویت مقوله به پرداختن ضرورت و اهمیت -2bull
شود می احساس درمان
به نسبت ما درمانی مراكز در معنوی مراقبتهای ارائه وضعیت -3bull است حد چه تا آمریکا و غربی كشورهای
با حد چه تا سنتی طب بویژه پزشکی های رشته دانشجویان و اساتید-4bull
را آن حد چه تا یا و دارند آشنایی معنوی های مراقبت آموزشهای گیرند می بکار
11
و باالخره
بلکه نیست کالب ژورنال عنوان به تکلیف یک ارائه تنها هدفbull را آن ما کشور درمان و بهداشت سیستم بشدت که است نیازی
است مرتبط کامال نیز نظام کلی سیاستهای با و کند می احساس
به توجه با -نیاز این رفع و حرکت این شروع که است امید وbull طب عزیز دانشجویان و اساتید در بیشتر معنوی پتانسیل
(اهلل شاء ان)بگیرد شکل حوزه این از - (اهلل بحمد )سنتی
12
محدویت
همه به پرداختن اجازه شاید وقت کمی و مقاله زیاد حجم به توجه باbull باشد نداشته وجود راهبردی و کاربردی مقاله این مهم موضوعات
مستمعین به هم متعال خداوند که کنیم می دعا ابتدا همین در بنابراینbull
این حقیر بنده این به هم و فرماید عنایت را کافی حوصله و صبر ما عزیز برسانم جایی به را بحث مقرر موعد در بتوانم که بدهد را توانایی و توفیق
(اهلل شاء ان)
صالحدید صورت در کشید درازا به بحث اگر که شود می پیشنهاد البتهbull شود گذاشته بحث به موضوع دیگری جلسه در عزیز سروران شما
13
در ضمن
سروران شما متانت و حوصله و صبر از پیشاپیش bull دارم را تشکر و تقدیر كمال گرامی
14
Harold G Koenig MD MHSc Professor of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences
Associate Professor of Medicine Department Division
Psychiatry Geriatric Behavioral Health
15
Training
bull MD MHSc University of CaliforniandashSan Francisco School of Medicine 1982
bull Residency
bull Psychiatry Duke University Medical Center 1989-1992 1991-1992
bull Fellowship
bull Geropsychiatry Duke University Medical Center 1991-1992
16
bull He is currently director of Dukes Center for the Study of ReligionSpirituality and Health
17
Publications Books bull Koenig has authored or edited more than 35 books[1] that
include bull Is religion good for your health The effects of religion on physical
and mental health Harold G Koenig (1997 New York Haworth Pastoral Press)
bull Handbook of religion and mental health Harold G Koenig (1998 New York Academic Press)
bull Handbook of religion and health (see article) Harold G Koenig Michael E McCullough amp David B Larson (2001 New York Oxford University Press)
18
Research bull Koenig has published over 280 scientific articles in
bull peer-reviewed journals bull scholarly professional journal articles
bull and 60 chapters in professional books[1]
bull HIndex=58
19
20
Abstract
bull This paper provides a concise but comprehensive review of research on religionspirituality (RS) and both mental health and physical health
21
It is based on
bull a systematic review of original data-based quantitative research published in peer-reviewed journals between 1872 and 2010 including a few seminal articles published since 2010
22
First
bull I provide a brief historical background to set the stage
bull Then I review research on RS and mental health examining relationships with both positive and negative mental health outcomes
23
where positive outcomes
bull include
bull well-being
bull happiness
bull hope
bull optimism
bull and gratefulness
24
and negative outcomes
bull Involve bull depression bull suicide bull anxiety bull psychosis bull substance abuse bull delinquencycrime bull marital instability bull and personality traits (positive and negative)
25
bull I then explain how and why RS might influence mental health
26
Next I review research on RS and health behaviors such as
bull physical activity
bull cigarette smoking
bull diet
bull and sexual practices
27
followed by a review of relationships between RS and
1 heart disease 2 hypertension 3 cerebrovascular disease 4 Alzheimers disease and dementia 5 immune functions 6 endocrine functions 7 cancer 8 overall mortality 9 physical disability 10 pain and somatic symptoms
28
I then present
bull a theoretical model explaining how RS might influence physical health
29
Finally bull I discuss what health professionals should do in
light of these research findings and make recommendations in this regard
30
31
سر تیترها
فهرست مطالب بطور کاملتر شامل موارد ذیل می باشندbull
32
4 Religion Spirituality and Mental Health
bull 41 Coping with Adversity
bull 42 Positive Emotions
bull 421 Well-BeingHappiness
bull 422 Hope
bull 423 Optimism
bull 424 Meaning and Purpose
bull 425 Self-Esteem
bull 426 Sense of Control
bull 427 Positive Character Traits 33
and negative outcomes
bull 43 Depression
bull 44 Suicide
bull 45 Anxiety
bull 46 Psychotic DisorderSchizophrenia
bull 47 Bipolar Disorder
bull 48 Personality Traits
bull 49 Substance Abuse
bull 410 Social Problems
bull 4101 DelinquencyCrime
bull 4102 Marital Instability
bull 4103 Social Support
bull 4104 Social Capitalسرمایه اجتماعی
34
bull 5 Explaining the Relationship RS and Mental Health
35
6 Religion Spirituality and Health Behaviors
bull 61 Cigarette Smoking
bull 62 Exercise
bull 63 Diet
bull 64 Weight
bull 65 Sexual Behavior
36
7 Religion Spirituality and Physical Health
bull 71 Coronary Heart Disease (CHD) bull 72 Hypertension bull 73 Cerebrovascular Disease bull 74 Alzheimerrsquos Disease and Dementia bull 75 Immune Function bull 76 Endocrine Function bull 77 Cancer bull 78 Physical Functioning bull 79 Self-Rated Health مراقبتی خود
bull 710 Pain and Somatic Symptoms bull 711 Mortality
37
8 Explaining the Relationship RS and Physical Health
bull 81 Psychological
bull 82 Social
bull 83 Health Behaviors
bull 84 Other Pathways
38
9 Clinical Implications
bull 91 Rationale for Integrating Spirituality
bull 92 How to Integrate Spirituality into Patient Care
bull 10 Conclusions
39
bull Conflict of Interests
bull Acknowledgment
bull References 601
40
bull The support to write this paper was provided in part by the John Templeton Foundation
41
bull - Koenig Harold G Religion spirituality and health The research and clinical implications
International Scholarly Research Notices 2012 (2012) اعالمیه های بین المللی تحقیقات علمی
42
Review Article bull Religion Spirituality and Health The
Research and Clinical Implications
bull - Koenig Harold G Religion spirituality and health The research and clinical implications International
Scholarly Research Notices 2012 (2012) اعالمیه های بین المللی تحقیقات علمی
43
1 Historical Background and Introduction
bull Religion medicine and healthcare have been related in one way or another in all population groups since the beginning of recorded history
44
bull Only in recent times have these systems of healing been separated
bull and this separation has occurred largely in highly developed nations
bull in many developing countries there is little or no such separation
45
bull The history of religion medicine and healthcare in developed countries of the West though is a fascinating one
bull The first hospitals in the West for the care of the sick in the general population were built by religious organizations and staffed by religious orders
46
bull Throughout the Middle Ages and up through the French Revolution physicians were often clergy
bull For hundreds of years in fact religious institutions were responsible for licensing physicians to practice medicine
bull In the American colonies in particular many of the clergy were also physiciansmdashoften as a second job that helped to supplement their meager income from church work
47
bull Care for those with mental health problems in the West also had its roots within monasteries and religious communities [2]
bull In 1247 the Priory of St Mary of Bethlehem was built in London on the Thames River [3]
48
bull Originally designed to house ldquodistracted peoplerdquo this was Europersquos (and perhaps the worldrsquos) first mental hospital
bull In 1547 however St Maryrsquos was torn down and replaced by Bethlehem or Bethlem Hospital [4]
49
bull Over the years as secular authorities took control over the institution the hospital became famous for its inhumane treatment of the mentally ill who were often chained [5]thinspdunked in water or beaten as necessary to control them
bull In later years an admission fee (2 pence) was charged to the general public to observe the patients abusing themselves or other patients [4]
50
bull The hospital eventually became known as ldquobedlamrdquo (from which comes the word used today to indicate a state of confusion and disarray)
51
bull In response to the abuses in mental hospitals and precipitated by the death of a Quaker patient in New York asylum in England an English merchant and devout Quaker named William Tuke began to promote a new form of treatment of the mentally ill called ldquomoral treatmentrdquo
52
bull In 1796 he and the Quaker community in England established their own asylum known as the York Retreat [6]
53
bull Not long after this the Quakers brought moral treatment to America where it became the dominant form of psychiatric care in that country [6]
54
bull Established in Philadelphia by the Quakers in 1813 ldquoFriends Hospitalrdquo (or Friends Asylum) became the first private institution in the United States dedicated solely to the care of those with mental illness [7]
55
bull Psychiatric hospitals that followed in the footsteps of Friends Asylum were the McLean Hospital (established in 1818 in Boston and now associated with Harvard) the Bloomingdale Asylum (established in 1821 in New York) and the Hartford Retreat (established in 1824 in Connecticut)mdashall modeled after the York Retreat and implementing moral treatment as the dominant therapy
56
bull It was not until modern times that religion and psychiatry began to part paths
bull This separation was encouraged by the psychiatrist Sigmund Freud
57
bull After being ldquointroducedrdquo to the neurotic and hysterical aspects of religion by the famous French neurologist Jean Charcot in the mid-1880s
bull Freud began to emphasize this in a widely read series of publications from 1907 through his death in 1939
58
bull These writings left a legacy that would influence the practice of psychiatrymdashespecially psychotherapymdashfor the rest of the century
bull and lead to a true schism between religion and mental health care
59
bull That schism was illustrated in 1993 by a systematic review of the religious content of DSM-III-R which found nearly one-quarter of all cases of mental illness being described using religious illustrations [12]
60
bull The conflict has continued to the present day Consider recent e-letters in response to two articles published in The Psychiatristthinspabout this topic [13 14] and an even more recent debate about the role of prayer in psychiatric practice [15]
61
bull This conflict has manifested in the clinical work of many mental health professionals who have generally ignored the religious resources of patients or viewed them as pathological
62
bull Consider that a recent national survey of US psychiatrists found that 56 said they never rarely or only sometimes inquire about religiousspiritual issues in patients with depression or anxiety [16]
63
![Page 12: Religion, Spirituality, and Health · Review Article •Religion, Spirituality, and Health: • The Research and Clinical Implications • - Koenig, Harold G. "Religion, spirituality,](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022062605/5fcb0bcd7925581572559072/html5/thumbnails/12.jpg)
و باالخره
بلکه نیست کالب ژورنال عنوان به تکلیف یک ارائه تنها هدفbull را آن ما کشور درمان و بهداشت سیستم بشدت که است نیازی
است مرتبط کامال نیز نظام کلی سیاستهای با و کند می احساس
به توجه با -نیاز این رفع و حرکت این شروع که است امید وbull طب عزیز دانشجویان و اساتید در بیشتر معنوی پتانسیل
(اهلل شاء ان)بگیرد شکل حوزه این از - (اهلل بحمد )سنتی
12
محدویت
همه به پرداختن اجازه شاید وقت کمی و مقاله زیاد حجم به توجه باbull باشد نداشته وجود راهبردی و کاربردی مقاله این مهم موضوعات
مستمعین به هم متعال خداوند که کنیم می دعا ابتدا همین در بنابراینbull
این حقیر بنده این به هم و فرماید عنایت را کافی حوصله و صبر ما عزیز برسانم جایی به را بحث مقرر موعد در بتوانم که بدهد را توانایی و توفیق
(اهلل شاء ان)
صالحدید صورت در کشید درازا به بحث اگر که شود می پیشنهاد البتهbull شود گذاشته بحث به موضوع دیگری جلسه در عزیز سروران شما
13
در ضمن
سروران شما متانت و حوصله و صبر از پیشاپیش bull دارم را تشکر و تقدیر كمال گرامی
14
Harold G Koenig MD MHSc Professor of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences
Associate Professor of Medicine Department Division
Psychiatry Geriatric Behavioral Health
15
Training
bull MD MHSc University of CaliforniandashSan Francisco School of Medicine 1982
bull Residency
bull Psychiatry Duke University Medical Center 1989-1992 1991-1992
bull Fellowship
bull Geropsychiatry Duke University Medical Center 1991-1992
16
bull He is currently director of Dukes Center for the Study of ReligionSpirituality and Health
17
Publications Books bull Koenig has authored or edited more than 35 books[1] that
include bull Is religion good for your health The effects of religion on physical
and mental health Harold G Koenig (1997 New York Haworth Pastoral Press)
bull Handbook of religion and mental health Harold G Koenig (1998 New York Academic Press)
bull Handbook of religion and health (see article) Harold G Koenig Michael E McCullough amp David B Larson (2001 New York Oxford University Press)
18
Research bull Koenig has published over 280 scientific articles in
bull peer-reviewed journals bull scholarly professional journal articles
bull and 60 chapters in professional books[1]
bull HIndex=58
19
20
Abstract
bull This paper provides a concise but comprehensive review of research on religionspirituality (RS) and both mental health and physical health
21
It is based on
bull a systematic review of original data-based quantitative research published in peer-reviewed journals between 1872 and 2010 including a few seminal articles published since 2010
22
First
bull I provide a brief historical background to set the stage
bull Then I review research on RS and mental health examining relationships with both positive and negative mental health outcomes
23
where positive outcomes
bull include
bull well-being
bull happiness
bull hope
bull optimism
bull and gratefulness
24
and negative outcomes
bull Involve bull depression bull suicide bull anxiety bull psychosis bull substance abuse bull delinquencycrime bull marital instability bull and personality traits (positive and negative)
25
bull I then explain how and why RS might influence mental health
26
Next I review research on RS and health behaviors such as
bull physical activity
bull cigarette smoking
bull diet
bull and sexual practices
27
followed by a review of relationships between RS and
1 heart disease 2 hypertension 3 cerebrovascular disease 4 Alzheimers disease and dementia 5 immune functions 6 endocrine functions 7 cancer 8 overall mortality 9 physical disability 10 pain and somatic symptoms
28
I then present
bull a theoretical model explaining how RS might influence physical health
29
Finally bull I discuss what health professionals should do in
light of these research findings and make recommendations in this regard
30
31
سر تیترها
فهرست مطالب بطور کاملتر شامل موارد ذیل می باشندbull
32
4 Religion Spirituality and Mental Health
bull 41 Coping with Adversity
bull 42 Positive Emotions
bull 421 Well-BeingHappiness
bull 422 Hope
bull 423 Optimism
bull 424 Meaning and Purpose
bull 425 Self-Esteem
bull 426 Sense of Control
bull 427 Positive Character Traits 33
and negative outcomes
bull 43 Depression
bull 44 Suicide
bull 45 Anxiety
bull 46 Psychotic DisorderSchizophrenia
bull 47 Bipolar Disorder
bull 48 Personality Traits
bull 49 Substance Abuse
bull 410 Social Problems
bull 4101 DelinquencyCrime
bull 4102 Marital Instability
bull 4103 Social Support
bull 4104 Social Capitalسرمایه اجتماعی
34
bull 5 Explaining the Relationship RS and Mental Health
35
6 Religion Spirituality and Health Behaviors
bull 61 Cigarette Smoking
bull 62 Exercise
bull 63 Diet
bull 64 Weight
bull 65 Sexual Behavior
36
7 Religion Spirituality and Physical Health
bull 71 Coronary Heart Disease (CHD) bull 72 Hypertension bull 73 Cerebrovascular Disease bull 74 Alzheimerrsquos Disease and Dementia bull 75 Immune Function bull 76 Endocrine Function bull 77 Cancer bull 78 Physical Functioning bull 79 Self-Rated Health مراقبتی خود
bull 710 Pain and Somatic Symptoms bull 711 Mortality
37
8 Explaining the Relationship RS and Physical Health
bull 81 Psychological
bull 82 Social
bull 83 Health Behaviors
bull 84 Other Pathways
38
9 Clinical Implications
bull 91 Rationale for Integrating Spirituality
bull 92 How to Integrate Spirituality into Patient Care
bull 10 Conclusions
39
bull Conflict of Interests
bull Acknowledgment
bull References 601
40
bull The support to write this paper was provided in part by the John Templeton Foundation
41
bull - Koenig Harold G Religion spirituality and health The research and clinical implications
International Scholarly Research Notices 2012 (2012) اعالمیه های بین المللی تحقیقات علمی
42
Review Article bull Religion Spirituality and Health The
Research and Clinical Implications
bull - Koenig Harold G Religion spirituality and health The research and clinical implications International
Scholarly Research Notices 2012 (2012) اعالمیه های بین المللی تحقیقات علمی
43
1 Historical Background and Introduction
bull Religion medicine and healthcare have been related in one way or another in all population groups since the beginning of recorded history
44
bull Only in recent times have these systems of healing been separated
bull and this separation has occurred largely in highly developed nations
bull in many developing countries there is little or no such separation
45
bull The history of religion medicine and healthcare in developed countries of the West though is a fascinating one
bull The first hospitals in the West for the care of the sick in the general population were built by religious organizations and staffed by religious orders
46
bull Throughout the Middle Ages and up through the French Revolution physicians were often clergy
bull For hundreds of years in fact religious institutions were responsible for licensing physicians to practice medicine
bull In the American colonies in particular many of the clergy were also physiciansmdashoften as a second job that helped to supplement their meager income from church work
47
bull Care for those with mental health problems in the West also had its roots within monasteries and religious communities [2]
bull In 1247 the Priory of St Mary of Bethlehem was built in London on the Thames River [3]
48
bull Originally designed to house ldquodistracted peoplerdquo this was Europersquos (and perhaps the worldrsquos) first mental hospital
bull In 1547 however St Maryrsquos was torn down and replaced by Bethlehem or Bethlem Hospital [4]
49
bull Over the years as secular authorities took control over the institution the hospital became famous for its inhumane treatment of the mentally ill who were often chained [5]thinspdunked in water or beaten as necessary to control them
bull In later years an admission fee (2 pence) was charged to the general public to observe the patients abusing themselves or other patients [4]
50
bull The hospital eventually became known as ldquobedlamrdquo (from which comes the word used today to indicate a state of confusion and disarray)
51
bull In response to the abuses in mental hospitals and precipitated by the death of a Quaker patient in New York asylum in England an English merchant and devout Quaker named William Tuke began to promote a new form of treatment of the mentally ill called ldquomoral treatmentrdquo
52
bull In 1796 he and the Quaker community in England established their own asylum known as the York Retreat [6]
53
bull Not long after this the Quakers brought moral treatment to America where it became the dominant form of psychiatric care in that country [6]
54
bull Established in Philadelphia by the Quakers in 1813 ldquoFriends Hospitalrdquo (or Friends Asylum) became the first private institution in the United States dedicated solely to the care of those with mental illness [7]
55
bull Psychiatric hospitals that followed in the footsteps of Friends Asylum were the McLean Hospital (established in 1818 in Boston and now associated with Harvard) the Bloomingdale Asylum (established in 1821 in New York) and the Hartford Retreat (established in 1824 in Connecticut)mdashall modeled after the York Retreat and implementing moral treatment as the dominant therapy
56
bull It was not until modern times that religion and psychiatry began to part paths
bull This separation was encouraged by the psychiatrist Sigmund Freud
57
bull After being ldquointroducedrdquo to the neurotic and hysterical aspects of religion by the famous French neurologist Jean Charcot in the mid-1880s
bull Freud began to emphasize this in a widely read series of publications from 1907 through his death in 1939
58
bull These writings left a legacy that would influence the practice of psychiatrymdashespecially psychotherapymdashfor the rest of the century
bull and lead to a true schism between religion and mental health care
59
bull That schism was illustrated in 1993 by a systematic review of the religious content of DSM-III-R which found nearly one-quarter of all cases of mental illness being described using religious illustrations [12]
60
bull The conflict has continued to the present day Consider recent e-letters in response to two articles published in The Psychiatristthinspabout this topic [13 14] and an even more recent debate about the role of prayer in psychiatric practice [15]
61
bull This conflict has manifested in the clinical work of many mental health professionals who have generally ignored the religious resources of patients or viewed them as pathological
62
bull Consider that a recent national survey of US psychiatrists found that 56 said they never rarely or only sometimes inquire about religiousspiritual issues in patients with depression or anxiety [16]
63
![Page 13: Religion, Spirituality, and Health · Review Article •Religion, Spirituality, and Health: • The Research and Clinical Implications • - Koenig, Harold G. "Religion, spirituality,](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022062605/5fcb0bcd7925581572559072/html5/thumbnails/13.jpg)
محدویت
همه به پرداختن اجازه شاید وقت کمی و مقاله زیاد حجم به توجه باbull باشد نداشته وجود راهبردی و کاربردی مقاله این مهم موضوعات
مستمعین به هم متعال خداوند که کنیم می دعا ابتدا همین در بنابراینbull
این حقیر بنده این به هم و فرماید عنایت را کافی حوصله و صبر ما عزیز برسانم جایی به را بحث مقرر موعد در بتوانم که بدهد را توانایی و توفیق
(اهلل شاء ان)
صالحدید صورت در کشید درازا به بحث اگر که شود می پیشنهاد البتهbull شود گذاشته بحث به موضوع دیگری جلسه در عزیز سروران شما
13
در ضمن
سروران شما متانت و حوصله و صبر از پیشاپیش bull دارم را تشکر و تقدیر كمال گرامی
14
Harold G Koenig MD MHSc Professor of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences
Associate Professor of Medicine Department Division
Psychiatry Geriatric Behavioral Health
15
Training
bull MD MHSc University of CaliforniandashSan Francisco School of Medicine 1982
bull Residency
bull Psychiatry Duke University Medical Center 1989-1992 1991-1992
bull Fellowship
bull Geropsychiatry Duke University Medical Center 1991-1992
16
bull He is currently director of Dukes Center for the Study of ReligionSpirituality and Health
17
Publications Books bull Koenig has authored or edited more than 35 books[1] that
include bull Is religion good for your health The effects of religion on physical
and mental health Harold G Koenig (1997 New York Haworth Pastoral Press)
bull Handbook of religion and mental health Harold G Koenig (1998 New York Academic Press)
bull Handbook of religion and health (see article) Harold G Koenig Michael E McCullough amp David B Larson (2001 New York Oxford University Press)
18
Research bull Koenig has published over 280 scientific articles in
bull peer-reviewed journals bull scholarly professional journal articles
bull and 60 chapters in professional books[1]
bull HIndex=58
19
20
Abstract
bull This paper provides a concise but comprehensive review of research on religionspirituality (RS) and both mental health and physical health
21
It is based on
bull a systematic review of original data-based quantitative research published in peer-reviewed journals between 1872 and 2010 including a few seminal articles published since 2010
22
First
bull I provide a brief historical background to set the stage
bull Then I review research on RS and mental health examining relationships with both positive and negative mental health outcomes
23
where positive outcomes
bull include
bull well-being
bull happiness
bull hope
bull optimism
bull and gratefulness
24
and negative outcomes
bull Involve bull depression bull suicide bull anxiety bull psychosis bull substance abuse bull delinquencycrime bull marital instability bull and personality traits (positive and negative)
25
bull I then explain how and why RS might influence mental health
26
Next I review research on RS and health behaviors such as
bull physical activity
bull cigarette smoking
bull diet
bull and sexual practices
27
followed by a review of relationships between RS and
1 heart disease 2 hypertension 3 cerebrovascular disease 4 Alzheimers disease and dementia 5 immune functions 6 endocrine functions 7 cancer 8 overall mortality 9 physical disability 10 pain and somatic symptoms
28
I then present
bull a theoretical model explaining how RS might influence physical health
29
Finally bull I discuss what health professionals should do in
light of these research findings and make recommendations in this regard
30
31
سر تیترها
فهرست مطالب بطور کاملتر شامل موارد ذیل می باشندbull
32
4 Religion Spirituality and Mental Health
bull 41 Coping with Adversity
bull 42 Positive Emotions
bull 421 Well-BeingHappiness
bull 422 Hope
bull 423 Optimism
bull 424 Meaning and Purpose
bull 425 Self-Esteem
bull 426 Sense of Control
bull 427 Positive Character Traits 33
and negative outcomes
bull 43 Depression
bull 44 Suicide
bull 45 Anxiety
bull 46 Psychotic DisorderSchizophrenia
bull 47 Bipolar Disorder
bull 48 Personality Traits
bull 49 Substance Abuse
bull 410 Social Problems
bull 4101 DelinquencyCrime
bull 4102 Marital Instability
bull 4103 Social Support
bull 4104 Social Capitalسرمایه اجتماعی
34
bull 5 Explaining the Relationship RS and Mental Health
35
6 Religion Spirituality and Health Behaviors
bull 61 Cigarette Smoking
bull 62 Exercise
bull 63 Diet
bull 64 Weight
bull 65 Sexual Behavior
36
7 Religion Spirituality and Physical Health
bull 71 Coronary Heart Disease (CHD) bull 72 Hypertension bull 73 Cerebrovascular Disease bull 74 Alzheimerrsquos Disease and Dementia bull 75 Immune Function bull 76 Endocrine Function bull 77 Cancer bull 78 Physical Functioning bull 79 Self-Rated Health مراقبتی خود
bull 710 Pain and Somatic Symptoms bull 711 Mortality
37
8 Explaining the Relationship RS and Physical Health
bull 81 Psychological
bull 82 Social
bull 83 Health Behaviors
bull 84 Other Pathways
38
9 Clinical Implications
bull 91 Rationale for Integrating Spirituality
bull 92 How to Integrate Spirituality into Patient Care
bull 10 Conclusions
39
bull Conflict of Interests
bull Acknowledgment
bull References 601
40
bull The support to write this paper was provided in part by the John Templeton Foundation
41
bull - Koenig Harold G Religion spirituality and health The research and clinical implications
International Scholarly Research Notices 2012 (2012) اعالمیه های بین المللی تحقیقات علمی
42
Review Article bull Religion Spirituality and Health The
Research and Clinical Implications
bull - Koenig Harold G Religion spirituality and health The research and clinical implications International
Scholarly Research Notices 2012 (2012) اعالمیه های بین المللی تحقیقات علمی
43
1 Historical Background and Introduction
bull Religion medicine and healthcare have been related in one way or another in all population groups since the beginning of recorded history
44
bull Only in recent times have these systems of healing been separated
bull and this separation has occurred largely in highly developed nations
bull in many developing countries there is little or no such separation
45
bull The history of religion medicine and healthcare in developed countries of the West though is a fascinating one
bull The first hospitals in the West for the care of the sick in the general population were built by religious organizations and staffed by religious orders
46
bull Throughout the Middle Ages and up through the French Revolution physicians were often clergy
bull For hundreds of years in fact religious institutions were responsible for licensing physicians to practice medicine
bull In the American colonies in particular many of the clergy were also physiciansmdashoften as a second job that helped to supplement their meager income from church work
47
bull Care for those with mental health problems in the West also had its roots within monasteries and religious communities [2]
bull In 1247 the Priory of St Mary of Bethlehem was built in London on the Thames River [3]
48
bull Originally designed to house ldquodistracted peoplerdquo this was Europersquos (and perhaps the worldrsquos) first mental hospital
bull In 1547 however St Maryrsquos was torn down and replaced by Bethlehem or Bethlem Hospital [4]
49
bull Over the years as secular authorities took control over the institution the hospital became famous for its inhumane treatment of the mentally ill who were often chained [5]thinspdunked in water or beaten as necessary to control them
bull In later years an admission fee (2 pence) was charged to the general public to observe the patients abusing themselves or other patients [4]
50
bull The hospital eventually became known as ldquobedlamrdquo (from which comes the word used today to indicate a state of confusion and disarray)
51
bull In response to the abuses in mental hospitals and precipitated by the death of a Quaker patient in New York asylum in England an English merchant and devout Quaker named William Tuke began to promote a new form of treatment of the mentally ill called ldquomoral treatmentrdquo
52
bull In 1796 he and the Quaker community in England established their own asylum known as the York Retreat [6]
53
bull Not long after this the Quakers brought moral treatment to America where it became the dominant form of psychiatric care in that country [6]
54
bull Established in Philadelphia by the Quakers in 1813 ldquoFriends Hospitalrdquo (or Friends Asylum) became the first private institution in the United States dedicated solely to the care of those with mental illness [7]
55
bull Psychiatric hospitals that followed in the footsteps of Friends Asylum were the McLean Hospital (established in 1818 in Boston and now associated with Harvard) the Bloomingdale Asylum (established in 1821 in New York) and the Hartford Retreat (established in 1824 in Connecticut)mdashall modeled after the York Retreat and implementing moral treatment as the dominant therapy
56
bull It was not until modern times that religion and psychiatry began to part paths
bull This separation was encouraged by the psychiatrist Sigmund Freud
57
bull After being ldquointroducedrdquo to the neurotic and hysterical aspects of religion by the famous French neurologist Jean Charcot in the mid-1880s
bull Freud began to emphasize this in a widely read series of publications from 1907 through his death in 1939
58
bull These writings left a legacy that would influence the practice of psychiatrymdashespecially psychotherapymdashfor the rest of the century
bull and lead to a true schism between religion and mental health care
59
bull That schism was illustrated in 1993 by a systematic review of the religious content of DSM-III-R which found nearly one-quarter of all cases of mental illness being described using religious illustrations [12]
60
bull The conflict has continued to the present day Consider recent e-letters in response to two articles published in The Psychiatristthinspabout this topic [13 14] and an even more recent debate about the role of prayer in psychiatric practice [15]
61
bull This conflict has manifested in the clinical work of many mental health professionals who have generally ignored the religious resources of patients or viewed them as pathological
62
bull Consider that a recent national survey of US psychiatrists found that 56 said they never rarely or only sometimes inquire about religiousspiritual issues in patients with depression or anxiety [16]
63
![Page 14: Religion, Spirituality, and Health · Review Article •Religion, Spirituality, and Health: • The Research and Clinical Implications • - Koenig, Harold G. "Religion, spirituality,](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022062605/5fcb0bcd7925581572559072/html5/thumbnails/14.jpg)
در ضمن
سروران شما متانت و حوصله و صبر از پیشاپیش bull دارم را تشکر و تقدیر كمال گرامی
14
Harold G Koenig MD MHSc Professor of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences
Associate Professor of Medicine Department Division
Psychiatry Geriatric Behavioral Health
15
Training
bull MD MHSc University of CaliforniandashSan Francisco School of Medicine 1982
bull Residency
bull Psychiatry Duke University Medical Center 1989-1992 1991-1992
bull Fellowship
bull Geropsychiatry Duke University Medical Center 1991-1992
16
bull He is currently director of Dukes Center for the Study of ReligionSpirituality and Health
17
Publications Books bull Koenig has authored or edited more than 35 books[1] that
include bull Is religion good for your health The effects of religion on physical
and mental health Harold G Koenig (1997 New York Haworth Pastoral Press)
bull Handbook of religion and mental health Harold G Koenig (1998 New York Academic Press)
bull Handbook of religion and health (see article) Harold G Koenig Michael E McCullough amp David B Larson (2001 New York Oxford University Press)
18
Research bull Koenig has published over 280 scientific articles in
bull peer-reviewed journals bull scholarly professional journal articles
bull and 60 chapters in professional books[1]
bull HIndex=58
19
20
Abstract
bull This paper provides a concise but comprehensive review of research on religionspirituality (RS) and both mental health and physical health
21
It is based on
bull a systematic review of original data-based quantitative research published in peer-reviewed journals between 1872 and 2010 including a few seminal articles published since 2010
22
First
bull I provide a brief historical background to set the stage
bull Then I review research on RS and mental health examining relationships with both positive and negative mental health outcomes
23
where positive outcomes
bull include
bull well-being
bull happiness
bull hope
bull optimism
bull and gratefulness
24
and negative outcomes
bull Involve bull depression bull suicide bull anxiety bull psychosis bull substance abuse bull delinquencycrime bull marital instability bull and personality traits (positive and negative)
25
bull I then explain how and why RS might influence mental health
26
Next I review research on RS and health behaviors such as
bull physical activity
bull cigarette smoking
bull diet
bull and sexual practices
27
followed by a review of relationships between RS and
1 heart disease 2 hypertension 3 cerebrovascular disease 4 Alzheimers disease and dementia 5 immune functions 6 endocrine functions 7 cancer 8 overall mortality 9 physical disability 10 pain and somatic symptoms
28
I then present
bull a theoretical model explaining how RS might influence physical health
29
Finally bull I discuss what health professionals should do in
light of these research findings and make recommendations in this regard
30
31
سر تیترها
فهرست مطالب بطور کاملتر شامل موارد ذیل می باشندbull
32
4 Religion Spirituality and Mental Health
bull 41 Coping with Adversity
bull 42 Positive Emotions
bull 421 Well-BeingHappiness
bull 422 Hope
bull 423 Optimism
bull 424 Meaning and Purpose
bull 425 Self-Esteem
bull 426 Sense of Control
bull 427 Positive Character Traits 33
and negative outcomes
bull 43 Depression
bull 44 Suicide
bull 45 Anxiety
bull 46 Psychotic DisorderSchizophrenia
bull 47 Bipolar Disorder
bull 48 Personality Traits
bull 49 Substance Abuse
bull 410 Social Problems
bull 4101 DelinquencyCrime
bull 4102 Marital Instability
bull 4103 Social Support
bull 4104 Social Capitalسرمایه اجتماعی
34
bull 5 Explaining the Relationship RS and Mental Health
35
6 Religion Spirituality and Health Behaviors
bull 61 Cigarette Smoking
bull 62 Exercise
bull 63 Diet
bull 64 Weight
bull 65 Sexual Behavior
36
7 Religion Spirituality and Physical Health
bull 71 Coronary Heart Disease (CHD) bull 72 Hypertension bull 73 Cerebrovascular Disease bull 74 Alzheimerrsquos Disease and Dementia bull 75 Immune Function bull 76 Endocrine Function bull 77 Cancer bull 78 Physical Functioning bull 79 Self-Rated Health مراقبتی خود
bull 710 Pain and Somatic Symptoms bull 711 Mortality
37
8 Explaining the Relationship RS and Physical Health
bull 81 Psychological
bull 82 Social
bull 83 Health Behaviors
bull 84 Other Pathways
38
9 Clinical Implications
bull 91 Rationale for Integrating Spirituality
bull 92 How to Integrate Spirituality into Patient Care
bull 10 Conclusions
39
bull Conflict of Interests
bull Acknowledgment
bull References 601
40
bull The support to write this paper was provided in part by the John Templeton Foundation
41
bull - Koenig Harold G Religion spirituality and health The research and clinical implications
International Scholarly Research Notices 2012 (2012) اعالمیه های بین المللی تحقیقات علمی
42
Review Article bull Religion Spirituality and Health The
Research and Clinical Implications
bull - Koenig Harold G Religion spirituality and health The research and clinical implications International
Scholarly Research Notices 2012 (2012) اعالمیه های بین المللی تحقیقات علمی
43
1 Historical Background and Introduction
bull Religion medicine and healthcare have been related in one way or another in all population groups since the beginning of recorded history
44
bull Only in recent times have these systems of healing been separated
bull and this separation has occurred largely in highly developed nations
bull in many developing countries there is little or no such separation
45
bull The history of religion medicine and healthcare in developed countries of the West though is a fascinating one
bull The first hospitals in the West for the care of the sick in the general population were built by religious organizations and staffed by religious orders
46
bull Throughout the Middle Ages and up through the French Revolution physicians were often clergy
bull For hundreds of years in fact religious institutions were responsible for licensing physicians to practice medicine
bull In the American colonies in particular many of the clergy were also physiciansmdashoften as a second job that helped to supplement their meager income from church work
47
bull Care for those with mental health problems in the West also had its roots within monasteries and religious communities [2]
bull In 1247 the Priory of St Mary of Bethlehem was built in London on the Thames River [3]
48
bull Originally designed to house ldquodistracted peoplerdquo this was Europersquos (and perhaps the worldrsquos) first mental hospital
bull In 1547 however St Maryrsquos was torn down and replaced by Bethlehem or Bethlem Hospital [4]
49
bull Over the years as secular authorities took control over the institution the hospital became famous for its inhumane treatment of the mentally ill who were often chained [5]thinspdunked in water or beaten as necessary to control them
bull In later years an admission fee (2 pence) was charged to the general public to observe the patients abusing themselves or other patients [4]
50
bull The hospital eventually became known as ldquobedlamrdquo (from which comes the word used today to indicate a state of confusion and disarray)
51
bull In response to the abuses in mental hospitals and precipitated by the death of a Quaker patient in New York asylum in England an English merchant and devout Quaker named William Tuke began to promote a new form of treatment of the mentally ill called ldquomoral treatmentrdquo
52
bull In 1796 he and the Quaker community in England established their own asylum known as the York Retreat [6]
53
bull Not long after this the Quakers brought moral treatment to America where it became the dominant form of psychiatric care in that country [6]
54
bull Established in Philadelphia by the Quakers in 1813 ldquoFriends Hospitalrdquo (or Friends Asylum) became the first private institution in the United States dedicated solely to the care of those with mental illness [7]
55
bull Psychiatric hospitals that followed in the footsteps of Friends Asylum were the McLean Hospital (established in 1818 in Boston and now associated with Harvard) the Bloomingdale Asylum (established in 1821 in New York) and the Hartford Retreat (established in 1824 in Connecticut)mdashall modeled after the York Retreat and implementing moral treatment as the dominant therapy
56
bull It was not until modern times that religion and psychiatry began to part paths
bull This separation was encouraged by the psychiatrist Sigmund Freud
57
bull After being ldquointroducedrdquo to the neurotic and hysterical aspects of religion by the famous French neurologist Jean Charcot in the mid-1880s
bull Freud began to emphasize this in a widely read series of publications from 1907 through his death in 1939
58
bull These writings left a legacy that would influence the practice of psychiatrymdashespecially psychotherapymdashfor the rest of the century
bull and lead to a true schism between religion and mental health care
59
bull That schism was illustrated in 1993 by a systematic review of the religious content of DSM-III-R which found nearly one-quarter of all cases of mental illness being described using religious illustrations [12]
60
bull The conflict has continued to the present day Consider recent e-letters in response to two articles published in The Psychiatristthinspabout this topic [13 14] and an even more recent debate about the role of prayer in psychiatric practice [15]
61
bull This conflict has manifested in the clinical work of many mental health professionals who have generally ignored the religious resources of patients or viewed them as pathological
62
bull Consider that a recent national survey of US psychiatrists found that 56 said they never rarely or only sometimes inquire about religiousspiritual issues in patients with depression or anxiety [16]
63
![Page 15: Religion, Spirituality, and Health · Review Article •Religion, Spirituality, and Health: • The Research and Clinical Implications • - Koenig, Harold G. "Religion, spirituality,](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022062605/5fcb0bcd7925581572559072/html5/thumbnails/15.jpg)
Harold G Koenig MD MHSc Professor of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences
Associate Professor of Medicine Department Division
Psychiatry Geriatric Behavioral Health
15
Training
bull MD MHSc University of CaliforniandashSan Francisco School of Medicine 1982
bull Residency
bull Psychiatry Duke University Medical Center 1989-1992 1991-1992
bull Fellowship
bull Geropsychiatry Duke University Medical Center 1991-1992
16
bull He is currently director of Dukes Center for the Study of ReligionSpirituality and Health
17
Publications Books bull Koenig has authored or edited more than 35 books[1] that
include bull Is religion good for your health The effects of religion on physical
and mental health Harold G Koenig (1997 New York Haworth Pastoral Press)
bull Handbook of religion and mental health Harold G Koenig (1998 New York Academic Press)
bull Handbook of religion and health (see article) Harold G Koenig Michael E McCullough amp David B Larson (2001 New York Oxford University Press)
18
Research bull Koenig has published over 280 scientific articles in
bull peer-reviewed journals bull scholarly professional journal articles
bull and 60 chapters in professional books[1]
bull HIndex=58
19
20
Abstract
bull This paper provides a concise but comprehensive review of research on religionspirituality (RS) and both mental health and physical health
21
It is based on
bull a systematic review of original data-based quantitative research published in peer-reviewed journals between 1872 and 2010 including a few seminal articles published since 2010
22
First
bull I provide a brief historical background to set the stage
bull Then I review research on RS and mental health examining relationships with both positive and negative mental health outcomes
23
where positive outcomes
bull include
bull well-being
bull happiness
bull hope
bull optimism
bull and gratefulness
24
and negative outcomes
bull Involve bull depression bull suicide bull anxiety bull psychosis bull substance abuse bull delinquencycrime bull marital instability bull and personality traits (positive and negative)
25
bull I then explain how and why RS might influence mental health
26
Next I review research on RS and health behaviors such as
bull physical activity
bull cigarette smoking
bull diet
bull and sexual practices
27
followed by a review of relationships between RS and
1 heart disease 2 hypertension 3 cerebrovascular disease 4 Alzheimers disease and dementia 5 immune functions 6 endocrine functions 7 cancer 8 overall mortality 9 physical disability 10 pain and somatic symptoms
28
I then present
bull a theoretical model explaining how RS might influence physical health
29
Finally bull I discuss what health professionals should do in
light of these research findings and make recommendations in this regard
30
31
سر تیترها
فهرست مطالب بطور کاملتر شامل موارد ذیل می باشندbull
32
4 Religion Spirituality and Mental Health
bull 41 Coping with Adversity
bull 42 Positive Emotions
bull 421 Well-BeingHappiness
bull 422 Hope
bull 423 Optimism
bull 424 Meaning and Purpose
bull 425 Self-Esteem
bull 426 Sense of Control
bull 427 Positive Character Traits 33
and negative outcomes
bull 43 Depression
bull 44 Suicide
bull 45 Anxiety
bull 46 Psychotic DisorderSchizophrenia
bull 47 Bipolar Disorder
bull 48 Personality Traits
bull 49 Substance Abuse
bull 410 Social Problems
bull 4101 DelinquencyCrime
bull 4102 Marital Instability
bull 4103 Social Support
bull 4104 Social Capitalسرمایه اجتماعی
34
bull 5 Explaining the Relationship RS and Mental Health
35
6 Religion Spirituality and Health Behaviors
bull 61 Cigarette Smoking
bull 62 Exercise
bull 63 Diet
bull 64 Weight
bull 65 Sexual Behavior
36
7 Religion Spirituality and Physical Health
bull 71 Coronary Heart Disease (CHD) bull 72 Hypertension bull 73 Cerebrovascular Disease bull 74 Alzheimerrsquos Disease and Dementia bull 75 Immune Function bull 76 Endocrine Function bull 77 Cancer bull 78 Physical Functioning bull 79 Self-Rated Health مراقبتی خود
bull 710 Pain and Somatic Symptoms bull 711 Mortality
37
8 Explaining the Relationship RS and Physical Health
bull 81 Psychological
bull 82 Social
bull 83 Health Behaviors
bull 84 Other Pathways
38
9 Clinical Implications
bull 91 Rationale for Integrating Spirituality
bull 92 How to Integrate Spirituality into Patient Care
bull 10 Conclusions
39
bull Conflict of Interests
bull Acknowledgment
bull References 601
40
bull The support to write this paper was provided in part by the John Templeton Foundation
41
bull - Koenig Harold G Religion spirituality and health The research and clinical implications
International Scholarly Research Notices 2012 (2012) اعالمیه های بین المللی تحقیقات علمی
42
Review Article bull Religion Spirituality and Health The
Research and Clinical Implications
bull - Koenig Harold G Religion spirituality and health The research and clinical implications International
Scholarly Research Notices 2012 (2012) اعالمیه های بین المللی تحقیقات علمی
43
1 Historical Background and Introduction
bull Religion medicine and healthcare have been related in one way or another in all population groups since the beginning of recorded history
44
bull Only in recent times have these systems of healing been separated
bull and this separation has occurred largely in highly developed nations
bull in many developing countries there is little or no such separation
45
bull The history of religion medicine and healthcare in developed countries of the West though is a fascinating one
bull The first hospitals in the West for the care of the sick in the general population were built by religious organizations and staffed by religious orders
46
bull Throughout the Middle Ages and up through the French Revolution physicians were often clergy
bull For hundreds of years in fact religious institutions were responsible for licensing physicians to practice medicine
bull In the American colonies in particular many of the clergy were also physiciansmdashoften as a second job that helped to supplement their meager income from church work
47
bull Care for those with mental health problems in the West also had its roots within monasteries and religious communities [2]
bull In 1247 the Priory of St Mary of Bethlehem was built in London on the Thames River [3]
48
bull Originally designed to house ldquodistracted peoplerdquo this was Europersquos (and perhaps the worldrsquos) first mental hospital
bull In 1547 however St Maryrsquos was torn down and replaced by Bethlehem or Bethlem Hospital [4]
49
bull Over the years as secular authorities took control over the institution the hospital became famous for its inhumane treatment of the mentally ill who were often chained [5]thinspdunked in water or beaten as necessary to control them
bull In later years an admission fee (2 pence) was charged to the general public to observe the patients abusing themselves or other patients [4]
50
bull The hospital eventually became known as ldquobedlamrdquo (from which comes the word used today to indicate a state of confusion and disarray)
51
bull In response to the abuses in mental hospitals and precipitated by the death of a Quaker patient in New York asylum in England an English merchant and devout Quaker named William Tuke began to promote a new form of treatment of the mentally ill called ldquomoral treatmentrdquo
52
bull In 1796 he and the Quaker community in England established their own asylum known as the York Retreat [6]
53
bull Not long after this the Quakers brought moral treatment to America where it became the dominant form of psychiatric care in that country [6]
54
bull Established in Philadelphia by the Quakers in 1813 ldquoFriends Hospitalrdquo (or Friends Asylum) became the first private institution in the United States dedicated solely to the care of those with mental illness [7]
55
bull Psychiatric hospitals that followed in the footsteps of Friends Asylum were the McLean Hospital (established in 1818 in Boston and now associated with Harvard) the Bloomingdale Asylum (established in 1821 in New York) and the Hartford Retreat (established in 1824 in Connecticut)mdashall modeled after the York Retreat and implementing moral treatment as the dominant therapy
56
bull It was not until modern times that religion and psychiatry began to part paths
bull This separation was encouraged by the psychiatrist Sigmund Freud
57
bull After being ldquointroducedrdquo to the neurotic and hysterical aspects of religion by the famous French neurologist Jean Charcot in the mid-1880s
bull Freud began to emphasize this in a widely read series of publications from 1907 through his death in 1939
58
bull These writings left a legacy that would influence the practice of psychiatrymdashespecially psychotherapymdashfor the rest of the century
bull and lead to a true schism between religion and mental health care
59
bull That schism was illustrated in 1993 by a systematic review of the religious content of DSM-III-R which found nearly one-quarter of all cases of mental illness being described using religious illustrations [12]
60
bull The conflict has continued to the present day Consider recent e-letters in response to two articles published in The Psychiatristthinspabout this topic [13 14] and an even more recent debate about the role of prayer in psychiatric practice [15]
61
bull This conflict has manifested in the clinical work of many mental health professionals who have generally ignored the religious resources of patients or viewed them as pathological
62
bull Consider that a recent national survey of US psychiatrists found that 56 said they never rarely or only sometimes inquire about religiousspiritual issues in patients with depression or anxiety [16]
63
![Page 16: Religion, Spirituality, and Health · Review Article •Religion, Spirituality, and Health: • The Research and Clinical Implications • - Koenig, Harold G. "Religion, spirituality,](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022062605/5fcb0bcd7925581572559072/html5/thumbnails/16.jpg)
Training
bull MD MHSc University of CaliforniandashSan Francisco School of Medicine 1982
bull Residency
bull Psychiatry Duke University Medical Center 1989-1992 1991-1992
bull Fellowship
bull Geropsychiatry Duke University Medical Center 1991-1992
16
bull He is currently director of Dukes Center for the Study of ReligionSpirituality and Health
17
Publications Books bull Koenig has authored or edited more than 35 books[1] that
include bull Is religion good for your health The effects of religion on physical
and mental health Harold G Koenig (1997 New York Haworth Pastoral Press)
bull Handbook of religion and mental health Harold G Koenig (1998 New York Academic Press)
bull Handbook of religion and health (see article) Harold G Koenig Michael E McCullough amp David B Larson (2001 New York Oxford University Press)
18
Research bull Koenig has published over 280 scientific articles in
bull peer-reviewed journals bull scholarly professional journal articles
bull and 60 chapters in professional books[1]
bull HIndex=58
19
20
Abstract
bull This paper provides a concise but comprehensive review of research on religionspirituality (RS) and both mental health and physical health
21
It is based on
bull a systematic review of original data-based quantitative research published in peer-reviewed journals between 1872 and 2010 including a few seminal articles published since 2010
22
First
bull I provide a brief historical background to set the stage
bull Then I review research on RS and mental health examining relationships with both positive and negative mental health outcomes
23
where positive outcomes
bull include
bull well-being
bull happiness
bull hope
bull optimism
bull and gratefulness
24
and negative outcomes
bull Involve bull depression bull suicide bull anxiety bull psychosis bull substance abuse bull delinquencycrime bull marital instability bull and personality traits (positive and negative)
25
bull I then explain how and why RS might influence mental health
26
Next I review research on RS and health behaviors such as
bull physical activity
bull cigarette smoking
bull diet
bull and sexual practices
27
followed by a review of relationships between RS and
1 heart disease 2 hypertension 3 cerebrovascular disease 4 Alzheimers disease and dementia 5 immune functions 6 endocrine functions 7 cancer 8 overall mortality 9 physical disability 10 pain and somatic symptoms
28
I then present
bull a theoretical model explaining how RS might influence physical health
29
Finally bull I discuss what health professionals should do in
light of these research findings and make recommendations in this regard
30
31
سر تیترها
فهرست مطالب بطور کاملتر شامل موارد ذیل می باشندbull
32
4 Religion Spirituality and Mental Health
bull 41 Coping with Adversity
bull 42 Positive Emotions
bull 421 Well-BeingHappiness
bull 422 Hope
bull 423 Optimism
bull 424 Meaning and Purpose
bull 425 Self-Esteem
bull 426 Sense of Control
bull 427 Positive Character Traits 33
and negative outcomes
bull 43 Depression
bull 44 Suicide
bull 45 Anxiety
bull 46 Psychotic DisorderSchizophrenia
bull 47 Bipolar Disorder
bull 48 Personality Traits
bull 49 Substance Abuse
bull 410 Social Problems
bull 4101 DelinquencyCrime
bull 4102 Marital Instability
bull 4103 Social Support
bull 4104 Social Capitalسرمایه اجتماعی
34
bull 5 Explaining the Relationship RS and Mental Health
35
6 Religion Spirituality and Health Behaviors
bull 61 Cigarette Smoking
bull 62 Exercise
bull 63 Diet
bull 64 Weight
bull 65 Sexual Behavior
36
7 Religion Spirituality and Physical Health
bull 71 Coronary Heart Disease (CHD) bull 72 Hypertension bull 73 Cerebrovascular Disease bull 74 Alzheimerrsquos Disease and Dementia bull 75 Immune Function bull 76 Endocrine Function bull 77 Cancer bull 78 Physical Functioning bull 79 Self-Rated Health مراقبتی خود
bull 710 Pain and Somatic Symptoms bull 711 Mortality
37
8 Explaining the Relationship RS and Physical Health
bull 81 Psychological
bull 82 Social
bull 83 Health Behaviors
bull 84 Other Pathways
38
9 Clinical Implications
bull 91 Rationale for Integrating Spirituality
bull 92 How to Integrate Spirituality into Patient Care
bull 10 Conclusions
39
bull Conflict of Interests
bull Acknowledgment
bull References 601
40
bull The support to write this paper was provided in part by the John Templeton Foundation
41
bull - Koenig Harold G Religion spirituality and health The research and clinical implications
International Scholarly Research Notices 2012 (2012) اعالمیه های بین المللی تحقیقات علمی
42
Review Article bull Religion Spirituality and Health The
Research and Clinical Implications
bull - Koenig Harold G Religion spirituality and health The research and clinical implications International
Scholarly Research Notices 2012 (2012) اعالمیه های بین المللی تحقیقات علمی
43
1 Historical Background and Introduction
bull Religion medicine and healthcare have been related in one way or another in all population groups since the beginning of recorded history
44
bull Only in recent times have these systems of healing been separated
bull and this separation has occurred largely in highly developed nations
bull in many developing countries there is little or no such separation
45
bull The history of religion medicine and healthcare in developed countries of the West though is a fascinating one
bull The first hospitals in the West for the care of the sick in the general population were built by religious organizations and staffed by religious orders
46
bull Throughout the Middle Ages and up through the French Revolution physicians were often clergy
bull For hundreds of years in fact religious institutions were responsible for licensing physicians to practice medicine
bull In the American colonies in particular many of the clergy were also physiciansmdashoften as a second job that helped to supplement their meager income from church work
47
bull Care for those with mental health problems in the West also had its roots within monasteries and religious communities [2]
bull In 1247 the Priory of St Mary of Bethlehem was built in London on the Thames River [3]
48
bull Originally designed to house ldquodistracted peoplerdquo this was Europersquos (and perhaps the worldrsquos) first mental hospital
bull In 1547 however St Maryrsquos was torn down and replaced by Bethlehem or Bethlem Hospital [4]
49
bull Over the years as secular authorities took control over the institution the hospital became famous for its inhumane treatment of the mentally ill who were often chained [5]thinspdunked in water or beaten as necessary to control them
bull In later years an admission fee (2 pence) was charged to the general public to observe the patients abusing themselves or other patients [4]
50
bull The hospital eventually became known as ldquobedlamrdquo (from which comes the word used today to indicate a state of confusion and disarray)
51
bull In response to the abuses in mental hospitals and precipitated by the death of a Quaker patient in New York asylum in England an English merchant and devout Quaker named William Tuke began to promote a new form of treatment of the mentally ill called ldquomoral treatmentrdquo
52
bull In 1796 he and the Quaker community in England established their own asylum known as the York Retreat [6]
53
bull Not long after this the Quakers brought moral treatment to America where it became the dominant form of psychiatric care in that country [6]
54
bull Established in Philadelphia by the Quakers in 1813 ldquoFriends Hospitalrdquo (or Friends Asylum) became the first private institution in the United States dedicated solely to the care of those with mental illness [7]
55
bull Psychiatric hospitals that followed in the footsteps of Friends Asylum were the McLean Hospital (established in 1818 in Boston and now associated with Harvard) the Bloomingdale Asylum (established in 1821 in New York) and the Hartford Retreat (established in 1824 in Connecticut)mdashall modeled after the York Retreat and implementing moral treatment as the dominant therapy
56
bull It was not until modern times that religion and psychiatry began to part paths
bull This separation was encouraged by the psychiatrist Sigmund Freud
57
bull After being ldquointroducedrdquo to the neurotic and hysterical aspects of religion by the famous French neurologist Jean Charcot in the mid-1880s
bull Freud began to emphasize this in a widely read series of publications from 1907 through his death in 1939
58
bull These writings left a legacy that would influence the practice of psychiatrymdashespecially psychotherapymdashfor the rest of the century
bull and lead to a true schism between religion and mental health care
59
bull That schism was illustrated in 1993 by a systematic review of the religious content of DSM-III-R which found nearly one-quarter of all cases of mental illness being described using religious illustrations [12]
60
bull The conflict has continued to the present day Consider recent e-letters in response to two articles published in The Psychiatristthinspabout this topic [13 14] and an even more recent debate about the role of prayer in psychiatric practice [15]
61
bull This conflict has manifested in the clinical work of many mental health professionals who have generally ignored the religious resources of patients or viewed them as pathological
62
bull Consider that a recent national survey of US psychiatrists found that 56 said they never rarely or only sometimes inquire about religiousspiritual issues in patients with depression or anxiety [16]
63
![Page 17: Religion, Spirituality, and Health · Review Article •Religion, Spirituality, and Health: • The Research and Clinical Implications • - Koenig, Harold G. "Religion, spirituality,](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022062605/5fcb0bcd7925581572559072/html5/thumbnails/17.jpg)
bull He is currently director of Dukes Center for the Study of ReligionSpirituality and Health
17
Publications Books bull Koenig has authored or edited more than 35 books[1] that
include bull Is religion good for your health The effects of religion on physical
and mental health Harold G Koenig (1997 New York Haworth Pastoral Press)
bull Handbook of religion and mental health Harold G Koenig (1998 New York Academic Press)
bull Handbook of religion and health (see article) Harold G Koenig Michael E McCullough amp David B Larson (2001 New York Oxford University Press)
18
Research bull Koenig has published over 280 scientific articles in
bull peer-reviewed journals bull scholarly professional journal articles
bull and 60 chapters in professional books[1]
bull HIndex=58
19
20
Abstract
bull This paper provides a concise but comprehensive review of research on religionspirituality (RS) and both mental health and physical health
21
It is based on
bull a systematic review of original data-based quantitative research published in peer-reviewed journals between 1872 and 2010 including a few seminal articles published since 2010
22
First
bull I provide a brief historical background to set the stage
bull Then I review research on RS and mental health examining relationships with both positive and negative mental health outcomes
23
where positive outcomes
bull include
bull well-being
bull happiness
bull hope
bull optimism
bull and gratefulness
24
and negative outcomes
bull Involve bull depression bull suicide bull anxiety bull psychosis bull substance abuse bull delinquencycrime bull marital instability bull and personality traits (positive and negative)
25
bull I then explain how and why RS might influence mental health
26
Next I review research on RS and health behaviors such as
bull physical activity
bull cigarette smoking
bull diet
bull and sexual practices
27
followed by a review of relationships between RS and
1 heart disease 2 hypertension 3 cerebrovascular disease 4 Alzheimers disease and dementia 5 immune functions 6 endocrine functions 7 cancer 8 overall mortality 9 physical disability 10 pain and somatic symptoms
28
I then present
bull a theoretical model explaining how RS might influence physical health
29
Finally bull I discuss what health professionals should do in
light of these research findings and make recommendations in this regard
30
31
سر تیترها
فهرست مطالب بطور کاملتر شامل موارد ذیل می باشندbull
32
4 Religion Spirituality and Mental Health
bull 41 Coping with Adversity
bull 42 Positive Emotions
bull 421 Well-BeingHappiness
bull 422 Hope
bull 423 Optimism
bull 424 Meaning and Purpose
bull 425 Self-Esteem
bull 426 Sense of Control
bull 427 Positive Character Traits 33
and negative outcomes
bull 43 Depression
bull 44 Suicide
bull 45 Anxiety
bull 46 Psychotic DisorderSchizophrenia
bull 47 Bipolar Disorder
bull 48 Personality Traits
bull 49 Substance Abuse
bull 410 Social Problems
bull 4101 DelinquencyCrime
bull 4102 Marital Instability
bull 4103 Social Support
bull 4104 Social Capitalسرمایه اجتماعی
34
bull 5 Explaining the Relationship RS and Mental Health
35
6 Religion Spirituality and Health Behaviors
bull 61 Cigarette Smoking
bull 62 Exercise
bull 63 Diet
bull 64 Weight
bull 65 Sexual Behavior
36
7 Religion Spirituality and Physical Health
bull 71 Coronary Heart Disease (CHD) bull 72 Hypertension bull 73 Cerebrovascular Disease bull 74 Alzheimerrsquos Disease and Dementia bull 75 Immune Function bull 76 Endocrine Function bull 77 Cancer bull 78 Physical Functioning bull 79 Self-Rated Health مراقبتی خود
bull 710 Pain and Somatic Symptoms bull 711 Mortality
37
8 Explaining the Relationship RS and Physical Health
bull 81 Psychological
bull 82 Social
bull 83 Health Behaviors
bull 84 Other Pathways
38
9 Clinical Implications
bull 91 Rationale for Integrating Spirituality
bull 92 How to Integrate Spirituality into Patient Care
bull 10 Conclusions
39
bull Conflict of Interests
bull Acknowledgment
bull References 601
40
bull The support to write this paper was provided in part by the John Templeton Foundation
41
bull - Koenig Harold G Religion spirituality and health The research and clinical implications
International Scholarly Research Notices 2012 (2012) اعالمیه های بین المللی تحقیقات علمی
42
Review Article bull Religion Spirituality and Health The
Research and Clinical Implications
bull - Koenig Harold G Religion spirituality and health The research and clinical implications International
Scholarly Research Notices 2012 (2012) اعالمیه های بین المللی تحقیقات علمی
43
1 Historical Background and Introduction
bull Religion medicine and healthcare have been related in one way or another in all population groups since the beginning of recorded history
44
bull Only in recent times have these systems of healing been separated
bull and this separation has occurred largely in highly developed nations
bull in many developing countries there is little or no such separation
45
bull The history of religion medicine and healthcare in developed countries of the West though is a fascinating one
bull The first hospitals in the West for the care of the sick in the general population were built by religious organizations and staffed by religious orders
46
bull Throughout the Middle Ages and up through the French Revolution physicians were often clergy
bull For hundreds of years in fact religious institutions were responsible for licensing physicians to practice medicine
bull In the American colonies in particular many of the clergy were also physiciansmdashoften as a second job that helped to supplement their meager income from church work
47
bull Care for those with mental health problems in the West also had its roots within monasteries and religious communities [2]
bull In 1247 the Priory of St Mary of Bethlehem was built in London on the Thames River [3]
48
bull Originally designed to house ldquodistracted peoplerdquo this was Europersquos (and perhaps the worldrsquos) first mental hospital
bull In 1547 however St Maryrsquos was torn down and replaced by Bethlehem or Bethlem Hospital [4]
49
bull Over the years as secular authorities took control over the institution the hospital became famous for its inhumane treatment of the mentally ill who were often chained [5]thinspdunked in water or beaten as necessary to control them
bull In later years an admission fee (2 pence) was charged to the general public to observe the patients abusing themselves or other patients [4]
50
bull The hospital eventually became known as ldquobedlamrdquo (from which comes the word used today to indicate a state of confusion and disarray)
51
bull In response to the abuses in mental hospitals and precipitated by the death of a Quaker patient in New York asylum in England an English merchant and devout Quaker named William Tuke began to promote a new form of treatment of the mentally ill called ldquomoral treatmentrdquo
52
bull In 1796 he and the Quaker community in England established their own asylum known as the York Retreat [6]
53
bull Not long after this the Quakers brought moral treatment to America where it became the dominant form of psychiatric care in that country [6]
54
bull Established in Philadelphia by the Quakers in 1813 ldquoFriends Hospitalrdquo (or Friends Asylum) became the first private institution in the United States dedicated solely to the care of those with mental illness [7]
55
bull Psychiatric hospitals that followed in the footsteps of Friends Asylum were the McLean Hospital (established in 1818 in Boston and now associated with Harvard) the Bloomingdale Asylum (established in 1821 in New York) and the Hartford Retreat (established in 1824 in Connecticut)mdashall modeled after the York Retreat and implementing moral treatment as the dominant therapy
56
bull It was not until modern times that religion and psychiatry began to part paths
bull This separation was encouraged by the psychiatrist Sigmund Freud
57
bull After being ldquointroducedrdquo to the neurotic and hysterical aspects of religion by the famous French neurologist Jean Charcot in the mid-1880s
bull Freud began to emphasize this in a widely read series of publications from 1907 through his death in 1939
58
bull These writings left a legacy that would influence the practice of psychiatrymdashespecially psychotherapymdashfor the rest of the century
bull and lead to a true schism between religion and mental health care
59
bull That schism was illustrated in 1993 by a systematic review of the religious content of DSM-III-R which found nearly one-quarter of all cases of mental illness being described using religious illustrations [12]
60
bull The conflict has continued to the present day Consider recent e-letters in response to two articles published in The Psychiatristthinspabout this topic [13 14] and an even more recent debate about the role of prayer in psychiatric practice [15]
61
bull This conflict has manifested in the clinical work of many mental health professionals who have generally ignored the religious resources of patients or viewed them as pathological
62
bull Consider that a recent national survey of US psychiatrists found that 56 said they never rarely or only sometimes inquire about religiousspiritual issues in patients with depression or anxiety [16]
63
![Page 18: Religion, Spirituality, and Health · Review Article •Religion, Spirituality, and Health: • The Research and Clinical Implications • - Koenig, Harold G. "Religion, spirituality,](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022062605/5fcb0bcd7925581572559072/html5/thumbnails/18.jpg)
Publications Books bull Koenig has authored or edited more than 35 books[1] that
include bull Is religion good for your health The effects of religion on physical
and mental health Harold G Koenig (1997 New York Haworth Pastoral Press)
bull Handbook of religion and mental health Harold G Koenig (1998 New York Academic Press)
bull Handbook of religion and health (see article) Harold G Koenig Michael E McCullough amp David B Larson (2001 New York Oxford University Press)
18
Research bull Koenig has published over 280 scientific articles in
bull peer-reviewed journals bull scholarly professional journal articles
bull and 60 chapters in professional books[1]
bull HIndex=58
19
20
Abstract
bull This paper provides a concise but comprehensive review of research on religionspirituality (RS) and both mental health and physical health
21
It is based on
bull a systematic review of original data-based quantitative research published in peer-reviewed journals between 1872 and 2010 including a few seminal articles published since 2010
22
First
bull I provide a brief historical background to set the stage
bull Then I review research on RS and mental health examining relationships with both positive and negative mental health outcomes
23
where positive outcomes
bull include
bull well-being
bull happiness
bull hope
bull optimism
bull and gratefulness
24
and negative outcomes
bull Involve bull depression bull suicide bull anxiety bull psychosis bull substance abuse bull delinquencycrime bull marital instability bull and personality traits (positive and negative)
25
bull I then explain how and why RS might influence mental health
26
Next I review research on RS and health behaviors such as
bull physical activity
bull cigarette smoking
bull diet
bull and sexual practices
27
followed by a review of relationships between RS and
1 heart disease 2 hypertension 3 cerebrovascular disease 4 Alzheimers disease and dementia 5 immune functions 6 endocrine functions 7 cancer 8 overall mortality 9 physical disability 10 pain and somatic symptoms
28
I then present
bull a theoretical model explaining how RS might influence physical health
29
Finally bull I discuss what health professionals should do in
light of these research findings and make recommendations in this regard
30
31
سر تیترها
فهرست مطالب بطور کاملتر شامل موارد ذیل می باشندbull
32
4 Religion Spirituality and Mental Health
bull 41 Coping with Adversity
bull 42 Positive Emotions
bull 421 Well-BeingHappiness
bull 422 Hope
bull 423 Optimism
bull 424 Meaning and Purpose
bull 425 Self-Esteem
bull 426 Sense of Control
bull 427 Positive Character Traits 33
and negative outcomes
bull 43 Depression
bull 44 Suicide
bull 45 Anxiety
bull 46 Psychotic DisorderSchizophrenia
bull 47 Bipolar Disorder
bull 48 Personality Traits
bull 49 Substance Abuse
bull 410 Social Problems
bull 4101 DelinquencyCrime
bull 4102 Marital Instability
bull 4103 Social Support
bull 4104 Social Capitalسرمایه اجتماعی
34
bull 5 Explaining the Relationship RS and Mental Health
35
6 Religion Spirituality and Health Behaviors
bull 61 Cigarette Smoking
bull 62 Exercise
bull 63 Diet
bull 64 Weight
bull 65 Sexual Behavior
36
7 Religion Spirituality and Physical Health
bull 71 Coronary Heart Disease (CHD) bull 72 Hypertension bull 73 Cerebrovascular Disease bull 74 Alzheimerrsquos Disease and Dementia bull 75 Immune Function bull 76 Endocrine Function bull 77 Cancer bull 78 Physical Functioning bull 79 Self-Rated Health مراقبتی خود
bull 710 Pain and Somatic Symptoms bull 711 Mortality
37
8 Explaining the Relationship RS and Physical Health
bull 81 Psychological
bull 82 Social
bull 83 Health Behaviors
bull 84 Other Pathways
38
9 Clinical Implications
bull 91 Rationale for Integrating Spirituality
bull 92 How to Integrate Spirituality into Patient Care
bull 10 Conclusions
39
bull Conflict of Interests
bull Acknowledgment
bull References 601
40
bull The support to write this paper was provided in part by the John Templeton Foundation
41
bull - Koenig Harold G Religion spirituality and health The research and clinical implications
International Scholarly Research Notices 2012 (2012) اعالمیه های بین المللی تحقیقات علمی
42
Review Article bull Religion Spirituality and Health The
Research and Clinical Implications
bull - Koenig Harold G Religion spirituality and health The research and clinical implications International
Scholarly Research Notices 2012 (2012) اعالمیه های بین المللی تحقیقات علمی
43
1 Historical Background and Introduction
bull Religion medicine and healthcare have been related in one way or another in all population groups since the beginning of recorded history
44
bull Only in recent times have these systems of healing been separated
bull and this separation has occurred largely in highly developed nations
bull in many developing countries there is little or no such separation
45
bull The history of religion medicine and healthcare in developed countries of the West though is a fascinating one
bull The first hospitals in the West for the care of the sick in the general population were built by religious organizations and staffed by religious orders
46
bull Throughout the Middle Ages and up through the French Revolution physicians were often clergy
bull For hundreds of years in fact religious institutions were responsible for licensing physicians to practice medicine
bull In the American colonies in particular many of the clergy were also physiciansmdashoften as a second job that helped to supplement their meager income from church work
47
bull Care for those with mental health problems in the West also had its roots within monasteries and religious communities [2]
bull In 1247 the Priory of St Mary of Bethlehem was built in London on the Thames River [3]
48
bull Originally designed to house ldquodistracted peoplerdquo this was Europersquos (and perhaps the worldrsquos) first mental hospital
bull In 1547 however St Maryrsquos was torn down and replaced by Bethlehem or Bethlem Hospital [4]
49
bull Over the years as secular authorities took control over the institution the hospital became famous for its inhumane treatment of the mentally ill who were often chained [5]thinspdunked in water or beaten as necessary to control them
bull In later years an admission fee (2 pence) was charged to the general public to observe the patients abusing themselves or other patients [4]
50
bull The hospital eventually became known as ldquobedlamrdquo (from which comes the word used today to indicate a state of confusion and disarray)
51
bull In response to the abuses in mental hospitals and precipitated by the death of a Quaker patient in New York asylum in England an English merchant and devout Quaker named William Tuke began to promote a new form of treatment of the mentally ill called ldquomoral treatmentrdquo
52
bull In 1796 he and the Quaker community in England established their own asylum known as the York Retreat [6]
53
bull Not long after this the Quakers brought moral treatment to America where it became the dominant form of psychiatric care in that country [6]
54
bull Established in Philadelphia by the Quakers in 1813 ldquoFriends Hospitalrdquo (or Friends Asylum) became the first private institution in the United States dedicated solely to the care of those with mental illness [7]
55
bull Psychiatric hospitals that followed in the footsteps of Friends Asylum were the McLean Hospital (established in 1818 in Boston and now associated with Harvard) the Bloomingdale Asylum (established in 1821 in New York) and the Hartford Retreat (established in 1824 in Connecticut)mdashall modeled after the York Retreat and implementing moral treatment as the dominant therapy
56
bull It was not until modern times that religion and psychiatry began to part paths
bull This separation was encouraged by the psychiatrist Sigmund Freud
57
bull After being ldquointroducedrdquo to the neurotic and hysterical aspects of religion by the famous French neurologist Jean Charcot in the mid-1880s
bull Freud began to emphasize this in a widely read series of publications from 1907 through his death in 1939
58
bull These writings left a legacy that would influence the practice of psychiatrymdashespecially psychotherapymdashfor the rest of the century
bull and lead to a true schism between religion and mental health care
59
bull That schism was illustrated in 1993 by a systematic review of the religious content of DSM-III-R which found nearly one-quarter of all cases of mental illness being described using religious illustrations [12]
60
bull The conflict has continued to the present day Consider recent e-letters in response to two articles published in The Psychiatristthinspabout this topic [13 14] and an even more recent debate about the role of prayer in psychiatric practice [15]
61
bull This conflict has manifested in the clinical work of many mental health professionals who have generally ignored the religious resources of patients or viewed them as pathological
62
bull Consider that a recent national survey of US psychiatrists found that 56 said they never rarely or only sometimes inquire about religiousspiritual issues in patients with depression or anxiety [16]
63
![Page 19: Religion, Spirituality, and Health · Review Article •Religion, Spirituality, and Health: • The Research and Clinical Implications • - Koenig, Harold G. "Religion, spirituality,](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022062605/5fcb0bcd7925581572559072/html5/thumbnails/19.jpg)
Research bull Koenig has published over 280 scientific articles in
bull peer-reviewed journals bull scholarly professional journal articles
bull and 60 chapters in professional books[1]
bull HIndex=58
19
20
Abstract
bull This paper provides a concise but comprehensive review of research on religionspirituality (RS) and both mental health and physical health
21
It is based on
bull a systematic review of original data-based quantitative research published in peer-reviewed journals between 1872 and 2010 including a few seminal articles published since 2010
22
First
bull I provide a brief historical background to set the stage
bull Then I review research on RS and mental health examining relationships with both positive and negative mental health outcomes
23
where positive outcomes
bull include
bull well-being
bull happiness
bull hope
bull optimism
bull and gratefulness
24
and negative outcomes
bull Involve bull depression bull suicide bull anxiety bull psychosis bull substance abuse bull delinquencycrime bull marital instability bull and personality traits (positive and negative)
25
bull I then explain how and why RS might influence mental health
26
Next I review research on RS and health behaviors such as
bull physical activity
bull cigarette smoking
bull diet
bull and sexual practices
27
followed by a review of relationships between RS and
1 heart disease 2 hypertension 3 cerebrovascular disease 4 Alzheimers disease and dementia 5 immune functions 6 endocrine functions 7 cancer 8 overall mortality 9 physical disability 10 pain and somatic symptoms
28
I then present
bull a theoretical model explaining how RS might influence physical health
29
Finally bull I discuss what health professionals should do in
light of these research findings and make recommendations in this regard
30
31
سر تیترها
فهرست مطالب بطور کاملتر شامل موارد ذیل می باشندbull
32
4 Religion Spirituality and Mental Health
bull 41 Coping with Adversity
bull 42 Positive Emotions
bull 421 Well-BeingHappiness
bull 422 Hope
bull 423 Optimism
bull 424 Meaning and Purpose
bull 425 Self-Esteem
bull 426 Sense of Control
bull 427 Positive Character Traits 33
and negative outcomes
bull 43 Depression
bull 44 Suicide
bull 45 Anxiety
bull 46 Psychotic DisorderSchizophrenia
bull 47 Bipolar Disorder
bull 48 Personality Traits
bull 49 Substance Abuse
bull 410 Social Problems
bull 4101 DelinquencyCrime
bull 4102 Marital Instability
bull 4103 Social Support
bull 4104 Social Capitalسرمایه اجتماعی
34
bull 5 Explaining the Relationship RS and Mental Health
35
6 Religion Spirituality and Health Behaviors
bull 61 Cigarette Smoking
bull 62 Exercise
bull 63 Diet
bull 64 Weight
bull 65 Sexual Behavior
36
7 Religion Spirituality and Physical Health
bull 71 Coronary Heart Disease (CHD) bull 72 Hypertension bull 73 Cerebrovascular Disease bull 74 Alzheimerrsquos Disease and Dementia bull 75 Immune Function bull 76 Endocrine Function bull 77 Cancer bull 78 Physical Functioning bull 79 Self-Rated Health مراقبتی خود
bull 710 Pain and Somatic Symptoms bull 711 Mortality
37
8 Explaining the Relationship RS and Physical Health
bull 81 Psychological
bull 82 Social
bull 83 Health Behaviors
bull 84 Other Pathways
38
9 Clinical Implications
bull 91 Rationale for Integrating Spirituality
bull 92 How to Integrate Spirituality into Patient Care
bull 10 Conclusions
39
bull Conflict of Interests
bull Acknowledgment
bull References 601
40
bull The support to write this paper was provided in part by the John Templeton Foundation
41
bull - Koenig Harold G Religion spirituality and health The research and clinical implications
International Scholarly Research Notices 2012 (2012) اعالمیه های بین المللی تحقیقات علمی
42
Review Article bull Religion Spirituality and Health The
Research and Clinical Implications
bull - Koenig Harold G Religion spirituality and health The research and clinical implications International
Scholarly Research Notices 2012 (2012) اعالمیه های بین المللی تحقیقات علمی
43
1 Historical Background and Introduction
bull Religion medicine and healthcare have been related in one way or another in all population groups since the beginning of recorded history
44
bull Only in recent times have these systems of healing been separated
bull and this separation has occurred largely in highly developed nations
bull in many developing countries there is little or no such separation
45
bull The history of religion medicine and healthcare in developed countries of the West though is a fascinating one
bull The first hospitals in the West for the care of the sick in the general population were built by religious organizations and staffed by religious orders
46
bull Throughout the Middle Ages and up through the French Revolution physicians were often clergy
bull For hundreds of years in fact religious institutions were responsible for licensing physicians to practice medicine
bull In the American colonies in particular many of the clergy were also physiciansmdashoften as a second job that helped to supplement their meager income from church work
47
bull Care for those with mental health problems in the West also had its roots within monasteries and religious communities [2]
bull In 1247 the Priory of St Mary of Bethlehem was built in London on the Thames River [3]
48
bull Originally designed to house ldquodistracted peoplerdquo this was Europersquos (and perhaps the worldrsquos) first mental hospital
bull In 1547 however St Maryrsquos was torn down and replaced by Bethlehem or Bethlem Hospital [4]
49
bull Over the years as secular authorities took control over the institution the hospital became famous for its inhumane treatment of the mentally ill who were often chained [5]thinspdunked in water or beaten as necessary to control them
bull In later years an admission fee (2 pence) was charged to the general public to observe the patients abusing themselves or other patients [4]
50
bull The hospital eventually became known as ldquobedlamrdquo (from which comes the word used today to indicate a state of confusion and disarray)
51
bull In response to the abuses in mental hospitals and precipitated by the death of a Quaker patient in New York asylum in England an English merchant and devout Quaker named William Tuke began to promote a new form of treatment of the mentally ill called ldquomoral treatmentrdquo
52
bull In 1796 he and the Quaker community in England established their own asylum known as the York Retreat [6]
53
bull Not long after this the Quakers brought moral treatment to America where it became the dominant form of psychiatric care in that country [6]
54
bull Established in Philadelphia by the Quakers in 1813 ldquoFriends Hospitalrdquo (or Friends Asylum) became the first private institution in the United States dedicated solely to the care of those with mental illness [7]
55
bull Psychiatric hospitals that followed in the footsteps of Friends Asylum were the McLean Hospital (established in 1818 in Boston and now associated with Harvard) the Bloomingdale Asylum (established in 1821 in New York) and the Hartford Retreat (established in 1824 in Connecticut)mdashall modeled after the York Retreat and implementing moral treatment as the dominant therapy
56
bull It was not until modern times that religion and psychiatry began to part paths
bull This separation was encouraged by the psychiatrist Sigmund Freud
57
bull After being ldquointroducedrdquo to the neurotic and hysterical aspects of religion by the famous French neurologist Jean Charcot in the mid-1880s
bull Freud began to emphasize this in a widely read series of publications from 1907 through his death in 1939
58
bull These writings left a legacy that would influence the practice of psychiatrymdashespecially psychotherapymdashfor the rest of the century
bull and lead to a true schism between religion and mental health care
59
bull That schism was illustrated in 1993 by a systematic review of the religious content of DSM-III-R which found nearly one-quarter of all cases of mental illness being described using religious illustrations [12]
60
bull The conflict has continued to the present day Consider recent e-letters in response to two articles published in The Psychiatristthinspabout this topic [13 14] and an even more recent debate about the role of prayer in psychiatric practice [15]
61
bull This conflict has manifested in the clinical work of many mental health professionals who have generally ignored the religious resources of patients or viewed them as pathological
62
bull Consider that a recent national survey of US psychiatrists found that 56 said they never rarely or only sometimes inquire about religiousspiritual issues in patients with depression or anxiety [16]
63
![Page 20: Religion, Spirituality, and Health · Review Article •Religion, Spirituality, and Health: • The Research and Clinical Implications • - Koenig, Harold G. "Religion, spirituality,](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022062605/5fcb0bcd7925581572559072/html5/thumbnails/20.jpg)
20
Abstract
bull This paper provides a concise but comprehensive review of research on religionspirituality (RS) and both mental health and physical health
21
It is based on
bull a systematic review of original data-based quantitative research published in peer-reviewed journals between 1872 and 2010 including a few seminal articles published since 2010
22
First
bull I provide a brief historical background to set the stage
bull Then I review research on RS and mental health examining relationships with both positive and negative mental health outcomes
23
where positive outcomes
bull include
bull well-being
bull happiness
bull hope
bull optimism
bull and gratefulness
24
and negative outcomes
bull Involve bull depression bull suicide bull anxiety bull psychosis bull substance abuse bull delinquencycrime bull marital instability bull and personality traits (positive and negative)
25
bull I then explain how and why RS might influence mental health
26
Next I review research on RS and health behaviors such as
bull physical activity
bull cigarette smoking
bull diet
bull and sexual practices
27
followed by a review of relationships between RS and
1 heart disease 2 hypertension 3 cerebrovascular disease 4 Alzheimers disease and dementia 5 immune functions 6 endocrine functions 7 cancer 8 overall mortality 9 physical disability 10 pain and somatic symptoms
28
I then present
bull a theoretical model explaining how RS might influence physical health
29
Finally bull I discuss what health professionals should do in
light of these research findings and make recommendations in this regard
30
31
سر تیترها
فهرست مطالب بطور کاملتر شامل موارد ذیل می باشندbull
32
4 Religion Spirituality and Mental Health
bull 41 Coping with Adversity
bull 42 Positive Emotions
bull 421 Well-BeingHappiness
bull 422 Hope
bull 423 Optimism
bull 424 Meaning and Purpose
bull 425 Self-Esteem
bull 426 Sense of Control
bull 427 Positive Character Traits 33
and negative outcomes
bull 43 Depression
bull 44 Suicide
bull 45 Anxiety
bull 46 Psychotic DisorderSchizophrenia
bull 47 Bipolar Disorder
bull 48 Personality Traits
bull 49 Substance Abuse
bull 410 Social Problems
bull 4101 DelinquencyCrime
bull 4102 Marital Instability
bull 4103 Social Support
bull 4104 Social Capitalسرمایه اجتماعی
34
bull 5 Explaining the Relationship RS and Mental Health
35
6 Religion Spirituality and Health Behaviors
bull 61 Cigarette Smoking
bull 62 Exercise
bull 63 Diet
bull 64 Weight
bull 65 Sexual Behavior
36
7 Religion Spirituality and Physical Health
bull 71 Coronary Heart Disease (CHD) bull 72 Hypertension bull 73 Cerebrovascular Disease bull 74 Alzheimerrsquos Disease and Dementia bull 75 Immune Function bull 76 Endocrine Function bull 77 Cancer bull 78 Physical Functioning bull 79 Self-Rated Health مراقبتی خود
bull 710 Pain and Somatic Symptoms bull 711 Mortality
37
8 Explaining the Relationship RS and Physical Health
bull 81 Psychological
bull 82 Social
bull 83 Health Behaviors
bull 84 Other Pathways
38
9 Clinical Implications
bull 91 Rationale for Integrating Spirituality
bull 92 How to Integrate Spirituality into Patient Care
bull 10 Conclusions
39
bull Conflict of Interests
bull Acknowledgment
bull References 601
40
bull The support to write this paper was provided in part by the John Templeton Foundation
41
bull - Koenig Harold G Religion spirituality and health The research and clinical implications
International Scholarly Research Notices 2012 (2012) اعالمیه های بین المللی تحقیقات علمی
42
Review Article bull Religion Spirituality and Health The
Research and Clinical Implications
bull - Koenig Harold G Religion spirituality and health The research and clinical implications International
Scholarly Research Notices 2012 (2012) اعالمیه های بین المللی تحقیقات علمی
43
1 Historical Background and Introduction
bull Religion medicine and healthcare have been related in one way or another in all population groups since the beginning of recorded history
44
bull Only in recent times have these systems of healing been separated
bull and this separation has occurred largely in highly developed nations
bull in many developing countries there is little or no such separation
45
bull The history of religion medicine and healthcare in developed countries of the West though is a fascinating one
bull The first hospitals in the West for the care of the sick in the general population were built by religious organizations and staffed by religious orders
46
bull Throughout the Middle Ages and up through the French Revolution physicians were often clergy
bull For hundreds of years in fact religious institutions were responsible for licensing physicians to practice medicine
bull In the American colonies in particular many of the clergy were also physiciansmdashoften as a second job that helped to supplement their meager income from church work
47
bull Care for those with mental health problems in the West also had its roots within monasteries and religious communities [2]
bull In 1247 the Priory of St Mary of Bethlehem was built in London on the Thames River [3]
48
bull Originally designed to house ldquodistracted peoplerdquo this was Europersquos (and perhaps the worldrsquos) first mental hospital
bull In 1547 however St Maryrsquos was torn down and replaced by Bethlehem or Bethlem Hospital [4]
49
bull Over the years as secular authorities took control over the institution the hospital became famous for its inhumane treatment of the mentally ill who were often chained [5]thinspdunked in water or beaten as necessary to control them
bull In later years an admission fee (2 pence) was charged to the general public to observe the patients abusing themselves or other patients [4]
50
bull The hospital eventually became known as ldquobedlamrdquo (from which comes the word used today to indicate a state of confusion and disarray)
51
bull In response to the abuses in mental hospitals and precipitated by the death of a Quaker patient in New York asylum in England an English merchant and devout Quaker named William Tuke began to promote a new form of treatment of the mentally ill called ldquomoral treatmentrdquo
52
bull In 1796 he and the Quaker community in England established their own asylum known as the York Retreat [6]
53
bull Not long after this the Quakers brought moral treatment to America where it became the dominant form of psychiatric care in that country [6]
54
bull Established in Philadelphia by the Quakers in 1813 ldquoFriends Hospitalrdquo (or Friends Asylum) became the first private institution in the United States dedicated solely to the care of those with mental illness [7]
55
bull Psychiatric hospitals that followed in the footsteps of Friends Asylum were the McLean Hospital (established in 1818 in Boston and now associated with Harvard) the Bloomingdale Asylum (established in 1821 in New York) and the Hartford Retreat (established in 1824 in Connecticut)mdashall modeled after the York Retreat and implementing moral treatment as the dominant therapy
56
bull It was not until modern times that religion and psychiatry began to part paths
bull This separation was encouraged by the psychiatrist Sigmund Freud
57
bull After being ldquointroducedrdquo to the neurotic and hysterical aspects of religion by the famous French neurologist Jean Charcot in the mid-1880s
bull Freud began to emphasize this in a widely read series of publications from 1907 through his death in 1939
58
bull These writings left a legacy that would influence the practice of psychiatrymdashespecially psychotherapymdashfor the rest of the century
bull and lead to a true schism between religion and mental health care
59
bull That schism was illustrated in 1993 by a systematic review of the religious content of DSM-III-R which found nearly one-quarter of all cases of mental illness being described using religious illustrations [12]
60
bull The conflict has continued to the present day Consider recent e-letters in response to two articles published in The Psychiatristthinspabout this topic [13 14] and an even more recent debate about the role of prayer in psychiatric practice [15]
61
bull This conflict has manifested in the clinical work of many mental health professionals who have generally ignored the religious resources of patients or viewed them as pathological
62
bull Consider that a recent national survey of US psychiatrists found that 56 said they never rarely or only sometimes inquire about religiousspiritual issues in patients with depression or anxiety [16]
63
![Page 21: Religion, Spirituality, and Health · Review Article •Religion, Spirituality, and Health: • The Research and Clinical Implications • - Koenig, Harold G. "Religion, spirituality,](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022062605/5fcb0bcd7925581572559072/html5/thumbnails/21.jpg)
Abstract
bull This paper provides a concise but comprehensive review of research on religionspirituality (RS) and both mental health and physical health
21
It is based on
bull a systematic review of original data-based quantitative research published in peer-reviewed journals between 1872 and 2010 including a few seminal articles published since 2010
22
First
bull I provide a brief historical background to set the stage
bull Then I review research on RS and mental health examining relationships with both positive and negative mental health outcomes
23
where positive outcomes
bull include
bull well-being
bull happiness
bull hope
bull optimism
bull and gratefulness
24
and negative outcomes
bull Involve bull depression bull suicide bull anxiety bull psychosis bull substance abuse bull delinquencycrime bull marital instability bull and personality traits (positive and negative)
25
bull I then explain how and why RS might influence mental health
26
Next I review research on RS and health behaviors such as
bull physical activity
bull cigarette smoking
bull diet
bull and sexual practices
27
followed by a review of relationships between RS and
1 heart disease 2 hypertension 3 cerebrovascular disease 4 Alzheimers disease and dementia 5 immune functions 6 endocrine functions 7 cancer 8 overall mortality 9 physical disability 10 pain and somatic symptoms
28
I then present
bull a theoretical model explaining how RS might influence physical health
29
Finally bull I discuss what health professionals should do in
light of these research findings and make recommendations in this regard
30
31
سر تیترها
فهرست مطالب بطور کاملتر شامل موارد ذیل می باشندbull
32
4 Religion Spirituality and Mental Health
bull 41 Coping with Adversity
bull 42 Positive Emotions
bull 421 Well-BeingHappiness
bull 422 Hope
bull 423 Optimism
bull 424 Meaning and Purpose
bull 425 Self-Esteem
bull 426 Sense of Control
bull 427 Positive Character Traits 33
and negative outcomes
bull 43 Depression
bull 44 Suicide
bull 45 Anxiety
bull 46 Psychotic DisorderSchizophrenia
bull 47 Bipolar Disorder
bull 48 Personality Traits
bull 49 Substance Abuse
bull 410 Social Problems
bull 4101 DelinquencyCrime
bull 4102 Marital Instability
bull 4103 Social Support
bull 4104 Social Capitalسرمایه اجتماعی
34
bull 5 Explaining the Relationship RS and Mental Health
35
6 Religion Spirituality and Health Behaviors
bull 61 Cigarette Smoking
bull 62 Exercise
bull 63 Diet
bull 64 Weight
bull 65 Sexual Behavior
36
7 Religion Spirituality and Physical Health
bull 71 Coronary Heart Disease (CHD) bull 72 Hypertension bull 73 Cerebrovascular Disease bull 74 Alzheimerrsquos Disease and Dementia bull 75 Immune Function bull 76 Endocrine Function bull 77 Cancer bull 78 Physical Functioning bull 79 Self-Rated Health مراقبتی خود
bull 710 Pain and Somatic Symptoms bull 711 Mortality
37
8 Explaining the Relationship RS and Physical Health
bull 81 Psychological
bull 82 Social
bull 83 Health Behaviors
bull 84 Other Pathways
38
9 Clinical Implications
bull 91 Rationale for Integrating Spirituality
bull 92 How to Integrate Spirituality into Patient Care
bull 10 Conclusions
39
bull Conflict of Interests
bull Acknowledgment
bull References 601
40
bull The support to write this paper was provided in part by the John Templeton Foundation
41
bull - Koenig Harold G Religion spirituality and health The research and clinical implications
International Scholarly Research Notices 2012 (2012) اعالمیه های بین المللی تحقیقات علمی
42
Review Article bull Religion Spirituality and Health The
Research and Clinical Implications
bull - Koenig Harold G Religion spirituality and health The research and clinical implications International
Scholarly Research Notices 2012 (2012) اعالمیه های بین المللی تحقیقات علمی
43
1 Historical Background and Introduction
bull Religion medicine and healthcare have been related in one way or another in all population groups since the beginning of recorded history
44
bull Only in recent times have these systems of healing been separated
bull and this separation has occurred largely in highly developed nations
bull in many developing countries there is little or no such separation
45
bull The history of religion medicine and healthcare in developed countries of the West though is a fascinating one
bull The first hospitals in the West for the care of the sick in the general population were built by religious organizations and staffed by religious orders
46
bull Throughout the Middle Ages and up through the French Revolution physicians were often clergy
bull For hundreds of years in fact religious institutions were responsible for licensing physicians to practice medicine
bull In the American colonies in particular many of the clergy were also physiciansmdashoften as a second job that helped to supplement their meager income from church work
47
bull Care for those with mental health problems in the West also had its roots within monasteries and religious communities [2]
bull In 1247 the Priory of St Mary of Bethlehem was built in London on the Thames River [3]
48
bull Originally designed to house ldquodistracted peoplerdquo this was Europersquos (and perhaps the worldrsquos) first mental hospital
bull In 1547 however St Maryrsquos was torn down and replaced by Bethlehem or Bethlem Hospital [4]
49
bull Over the years as secular authorities took control over the institution the hospital became famous for its inhumane treatment of the mentally ill who were often chained [5]thinspdunked in water or beaten as necessary to control them
bull In later years an admission fee (2 pence) was charged to the general public to observe the patients abusing themselves or other patients [4]
50
bull The hospital eventually became known as ldquobedlamrdquo (from which comes the word used today to indicate a state of confusion and disarray)
51
bull In response to the abuses in mental hospitals and precipitated by the death of a Quaker patient in New York asylum in England an English merchant and devout Quaker named William Tuke began to promote a new form of treatment of the mentally ill called ldquomoral treatmentrdquo
52
bull In 1796 he and the Quaker community in England established their own asylum known as the York Retreat [6]
53
bull Not long after this the Quakers brought moral treatment to America where it became the dominant form of psychiatric care in that country [6]
54
bull Established in Philadelphia by the Quakers in 1813 ldquoFriends Hospitalrdquo (or Friends Asylum) became the first private institution in the United States dedicated solely to the care of those with mental illness [7]
55
bull Psychiatric hospitals that followed in the footsteps of Friends Asylum were the McLean Hospital (established in 1818 in Boston and now associated with Harvard) the Bloomingdale Asylum (established in 1821 in New York) and the Hartford Retreat (established in 1824 in Connecticut)mdashall modeled after the York Retreat and implementing moral treatment as the dominant therapy
56
bull It was not until modern times that religion and psychiatry began to part paths
bull This separation was encouraged by the psychiatrist Sigmund Freud
57
bull After being ldquointroducedrdquo to the neurotic and hysterical aspects of religion by the famous French neurologist Jean Charcot in the mid-1880s
bull Freud began to emphasize this in a widely read series of publications from 1907 through his death in 1939
58
bull These writings left a legacy that would influence the practice of psychiatrymdashespecially psychotherapymdashfor the rest of the century
bull and lead to a true schism between religion and mental health care
59
bull That schism was illustrated in 1993 by a systematic review of the religious content of DSM-III-R which found nearly one-quarter of all cases of mental illness being described using religious illustrations [12]
60
bull The conflict has continued to the present day Consider recent e-letters in response to two articles published in The Psychiatristthinspabout this topic [13 14] and an even more recent debate about the role of prayer in psychiatric practice [15]
61
bull This conflict has manifested in the clinical work of many mental health professionals who have generally ignored the religious resources of patients or viewed them as pathological
62
bull Consider that a recent national survey of US psychiatrists found that 56 said they never rarely or only sometimes inquire about religiousspiritual issues in patients with depression or anxiety [16]
63
![Page 22: Religion, Spirituality, and Health · Review Article •Religion, Spirituality, and Health: • The Research and Clinical Implications • - Koenig, Harold G. "Religion, spirituality,](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022062605/5fcb0bcd7925581572559072/html5/thumbnails/22.jpg)
It is based on
bull a systematic review of original data-based quantitative research published in peer-reviewed journals between 1872 and 2010 including a few seminal articles published since 2010
22
First
bull I provide a brief historical background to set the stage
bull Then I review research on RS and mental health examining relationships with both positive and negative mental health outcomes
23
where positive outcomes
bull include
bull well-being
bull happiness
bull hope
bull optimism
bull and gratefulness
24
and negative outcomes
bull Involve bull depression bull suicide bull anxiety bull psychosis bull substance abuse bull delinquencycrime bull marital instability bull and personality traits (positive and negative)
25
bull I then explain how and why RS might influence mental health
26
Next I review research on RS and health behaviors such as
bull physical activity
bull cigarette smoking
bull diet
bull and sexual practices
27
followed by a review of relationships between RS and
1 heart disease 2 hypertension 3 cerebrovascular disease 4 Alzheimers disease and dementia 5 immune functions 6 endocrine functions 7 cancer 8 overall mortality 9 physical disability 10 pain and somatic symptoms
28
I then present
bull a theoretical model explaining how RS might influence physical health
29
Finally bull I discuss what health professionals should do in
light of these research findings and make recommendations in this regard
30
31
سر تیترها
فهرست مطالب بطور کاملتر شامل موارد ذیل می باشندbull
32
4 Religion Spirituality and Mental Health
bull 41 Coping with Adversity
bull 42 Positive Emotions
bull 421 Well-BeingHappiness
bull 422 Hope
bull 423 Optimism
bull 424 Meaning and Purpose
bull 425 Self-Esteem
bull 426 Sense of Control
bull 427 Positive Character Traits 33
and negative outcomes
bull 43 Depression
bull 44 Suicide
bull 45 Anxiety
bull 46 Psychotic DisorderSchizophrenia
bull 47 Bipolar Disorder
bull 48 Personality Traits
bull 49 Substance Abuse
bull 410 Social Problems
bull 4101 DelinquencyCrime
bull 4102 Marital Instability
bull 4103 Social Support
bull 4104 Social Capitalسرمایه اجتماعی
34
bull 5 Explaining the Relationship RS and Mental Health
35
6 Religion Spirituality and Health Behaviors
bull 61 Cigarette Smoking
bull 62 Exercise
bull 63 Diet
bull 64 Weight
bull 65 Sexual Behavior
36
7 Religion Spirituality and Physical Health
bull 71 Coronary Heart Disease (CHD) bull 72 Hypertension bull 73 Cerebrovascular Disease bull 74 Alzheimerrsquos Disease and Dementia bull 75 Immune Function bull 76 Endocrine Function bull 77 Cancer bull 78 Physical Functioning bull 79 Self-Rated Health مراقبتی خود
bull 710 Pain and Somatic Symptoms bull 711 Mortality
37
8 Explaining the Relationship RS and Physical Health
bull 81 Psychological
bull 82 Social
bull 83 Health Behaviors
bull 84 Other Pathways
38
9 Clinical Implications
bull 91 Rationale for Integrating Spirituality
bull 92 How to Integrate Spirituality into Patient Care
bull 10 Conclusions
39
bull Conflict of Interests
bull Acknowledgment
bull References 601
40
bull The support to write this paper was provided in part by the John Templeton Foundation
41
bull - Koenig Harold G Religion spirituality and health The research and clinical implications
International Scholarly Research Notices 2012 (2012) اعالمیه های بین المللی تحقیقات علمی
42
Review Article bull Religion Spirituality and Health The
Research and Clinical Implications
bull - Koenig Harold G Religion spirituality and health The research and clinical implications International
Scholarly Research Notices 2012 (2012) اعالمیه های بین المللی تحقیقات علمی
43
1 Historical Background and Introduction
bull Religion medicine and healthcare have been related in one way or another in all population groups since the beginning of recorded history
44
bull Only in recent times have these systems of healing been separated
bull and this separation has occurred largely in highly developed nations
bull in many developing countries there is little or no such separation
45
bull The history of religion medicine and healthcare in developed countries of the West though is a fascinating one
bull The first hospitals in the West for the care of the sick in the general population were built by religious organizations and staffed by religious orders
46
bull Throughout the Middle Ages and up through the French Revolution physicians were often clergy
bull For hundreds of years in fact religious institutions were responsible for licensing physicians to practice medicine
bull In the American colonies in particular many of the clergy were also physiciansmdashoften as a second job that helped to supplement their meager income from church work
47
bull Care for those with mental health problems in the West also had its roots within monasteries and religious communities [2]
bull In 1247 the Priory of St Mary of Bethlehem was built in London on the Thames River [3]
48
bull Originally designed to house ldquodistracted peoplerdquo this was Europersquos (and perhaps the worldrsquos) first mental hospital
bull In 1547 however St Maryrsquos was torn down and replaced by Bethlehem or Bethlem Hospital [4]
49
bull Over the years as secular authorities took control over the institution the hospital became famous for its inhumane treatment of the mentally ill who were often chained [5]thinspdunked in water or beaten as necessary to control them
bull In later years an admission fee (2 pence) was charged to the general public to observe the patients abusing themselves or other patients [4]
50
bull The hospital eventually became known as ldquobedlamrdquo (from which comes the word used today to indicate a state of confusion and disarray)
51
bull In response to the abuses in mental hospitals and precipitated by the death of a Quaker patient in New York asylum in England an English merchant and devout Quaker named William Tuke began to promote a new form of treatment of the mentally ill called ldquomoral treatmentrdquo
52
bull In 1796 he and the Quaker community in England established their own asylum known as the York Retreat [6]
53
bull Not long after this the Quakers brought moral treatment to America where it became the dominant form of psychiatric care in that country [6]
54
bull Established in Philadelphia by the Quakers in 1813 ldquoFriends Hospitalrdquo (or Friends Asylum) became the first private institution in the United States dedicated solely to the care of those with mental illness [7]
55
bull Psychiatric hospitals that followed in the footsteps of Friends Asylum were the McLean Hospital (established in 1818 in Boston and now associated with Harvard) the Bloomingdale Asylum (established in 1821 in New York) and the Hartford Retreat (established in 1824 in Connecticut)mdashall modeled after the York Retreat and implementing moral treatment as the dominant therapy
56
bull It was not until modern times that religion and psychiatry began to part paths
bull This separation was encouraged by the psychiatrist Sigmund Freud
57
bull After being ldquointroducedrdquo to the neurotic and hysterical aspects of religion by the famous French neurologist Jean Charcot in the mid-1880s
bull Freud began to emphasize this in a widely read series of publications from 1907 through his death in 1939
58
bull These writings left a legacy that would influence the practice of psychiatrymdashespecially psychotherapymdashfor the rest of the century
bull and lead to a true schism between religion and mental health care
59
bull That schism was illustrated in 1993 by a systematic review of the religious content of DSM-III-R which found nearly one-quarter of all cases of mental illness being described using religious illustrations [12]
60
bull The conflict has continued to the present day Consider recent e-letters in response to two articles published in The Psychiatristthinspabout this topic [13 14] and an even more recent debate about the role of prayer in psychiatric practice [15]
61
bull This conflict has manifested in the clinical work of many mental health professionals who have generally ignored the religious resources of patients or viewed them as pathological
62
bull Consider that a recent national survey of US psychiatrists found that 56 said they never rarely or only sometimes inquire about religiousspiritual issues in patients with depression or anxiety [16]
63
![Page 23: Religion, Spirituality, and Health · Review Article •Religion, Spirituality, and Health: • The Research and Clinical Implications • - Koenig, Harold G. "Religion, spirituality,](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022062605/5fcb0bcd7925581572559072/html5/thumbnails/23.jpg)
First
bull I provide a brief historical background to set the stage
bull Then I review research on RS and mental health examining relationships with both positive and negative mental health outcomes
23
where positive outcomes
bull include
bull well-being
bull happiness
bull hope
bull optimism
bull and gratefulness
24
and negative outcomes
bull Involve bull depression bull suicide bull anxiety bull psychosis bull substance abuse bull delinquencycrime bull marital instability bull and personality traits (positive and negative)
25
bull I then explain how and why RS might influence mental health
26
Next I review research on RS and health behaviors such as
bull physical activity
bull cigarette smoking
bull diet
bull and sexual practices
27
followed by a review of relationships between RS and
1 heart disease 2 hypertension 3 cerebrovascular disease 4 Alzheimers disease and dementia 5 immune functions 6 endocrine functions 7 cancer 8 overall mortality 9 physical disability 10 pain and somatic symptoms
28
I then present
bull a theoretical model explaining how RS might influence physical health
29
Finally bull I discuss what health professionals should do in
light of these research findings and make recommendations in this regard
30
31
سر تیترها
فهرست مطالب بطور کاملتر شامل موارد ذیل می باشندbull
32
4 Religion Spirituality and Mental Health
bull 41 Coping with Adversity
bull 42 Positive Emotions
bull 421 Well-BeingHappiness
bull 422 Hope
bull 423 Optimism
bull 424 Meaning and Purpose
bull 425 Self-Esteem
bull 426 Sense of Control
bull 427 Positive Character Traits 33
and negative outcomes
bull 43 Depression
bull 44 Suicide
bull 45 Anxiety
bull 46 Psychotic DisorderSchizophrenia
bull 47 Bipolar Disorder
bull 48 Personality Traits
bull 49 Substance Abuse
bull 410 Social Problems
bull 4101 DelinquencyCrime
bull 4102 Marital Instability
bull 4103 Social Support
bull 4104 Social Capitalسرمایه اجتماعی
34
bull 5 Explaining the Relationship RS and Mental Health
35
6 Religion Spirituality and Health Behaviors
bull 61 Cigarette Smoking
bull 62 Exercise
bull 63 Diet
bull 64 Weight
bull 65 Sexual Behavior
36
7 Religion Spirituality and Physical Health
bull 71 Coronary Heart Disease (CHD) bull 72 Hypertension bull 73 Cerebrovascular Disease bull 74 Alzheimerrsquos Disease and Dementia bull 75 Immune Function bull 76 Endocrine Function bull 77 Cancer bull 78 Physical Functioning bull 79 Self-Rated Health مراقبتی خود
bull 710 Pain and Somatic Symptoms bull 711 Mortality
37
8 Explaining the Relationship RS and Physical Health
bull 81 Psychological
bull 82 Social
bull 83 Health Behaviors
bull 84 Other Pathways
38
9 Clinical Implications
bull 91 Rationale for Integrating Spirituality
bull 92 How to Integrate Spirituality into Patient Care
bull 10 Conclusions
39
bull Conflict of Interests
bull Acknowledgment
bull References 601
40
bull The support to write this paper was provided in part by the John Templeton Foundation
41
bull - Koenig Harold G Religion spirituality and health The research and clinical implications
International Scholarly Research Notices 2012 (2012) اعالمیه های بین المللی تحقیقات علمی
42
Review Article bull Religion Spirituality and Health The
Research and Clinical Implications
bull - Koenig Harold G Religion spirituality and health The research and clinical implications International
Scholarly Research Notices 2012 (2012) اعالمیه های بین المللی تحقیقات علمی
43
1 Historical Background and Introduction
bull Religion medicine and healthcare have been related in one way or another in all population groups since the beginning of recorded history
44
bull Only in recent times have these systems of healing been separated
bull and this separation has occurred largely in highly developed nations
bull in many developing countries there is little or no such separation
45
bull The history of religion medicine and healthcare in developed countries of the West though is a fascinating one
bull The first hospitals in the West for the care of the sick in the general population were built by religious organizations and staffed by religious orders
46
bull Throughout the Middle Ages and up through the French Revolution physicians were often clergy
bull For hundreds of years in fact religious institutions were responsible for licensing physicians to practice medicine
bull In the American colonies in particular many of the clergy were also physiciansmdashoften as a second job that helped to supplement their meager income from church work
47
bull Care for those with mental health problems in the West also had its roots within monasteries and religious communities [2]
bull In 1247 the Priory of St Mary of Bethlehem was built in London on the Thames River [3]
48
bull Originally designed to house ldquodistracted peoplerdquo this was Europersquos (and perhaps the worldrsquos) first mental hospital
bull In 1547 however St Maryrsquos was torn down and replaced by Bethlehem or Bethlem Hospital [4]
49
bull Over the years as secular authorities took control over the institution the hospital became famous for its inhumane treatment of the mentally ill who were often chained [5]thinspdunked in water or beaten as necessary to control them
bull In later years an admission fee (2 pence) was charged to the general public to observe the patients abusing themselves or other patients [4]
50
bull The hospital eventually became known as ldquobedlamrdquo (from which comes the word used today to indicate a state of confusion and disarray)
51
bull In response to the abuses in mental hospitals and precipitated by the death of a Quaker patient in New York asylum in England an English merchant and devout Quaker named William Tuke began to promote a new form of treatment of the mentally ill called ldquomoral treatmentrdquo
52
bull In 1796 he and the Quaker community in England established their own asylum known as the York Retreat [6]
53
bull Not long after this the Quakers brought moral treatment to America where it became the dominant form of psychiatric care in that country [6]
54
bull Established in Philadelphia by the Quakers in 1813 ldquoFriends Hospitalrdquo (or Friends Asylum) became the first private institution in the United States dedicated solely to the care of those with mental illness [7]
55
bull Psychiatric hospitals that followed in the footsteps of Friends Asylum were the McLean Hospital (established in 1818 in Boston and now associated with Harvard) the Bloomingdale Asylum (established in 1821 in New York) and the Hartford Retreat (established in 1824 in Connecticut)mdashall modeled after the York Retreat and implementing moral treatment as the dominant therapy
56
bull It was not until modern times that religion and psychiatry began to part paths
bull This separation was encouraged by the psychiatrist Sigmund Freud
57
bull After being ldquointroducedrdquo to the neurotic and hysterical aspects of religion by the famous French neurologist Jean Charcot in the mid-1880s
bull Freud began to emphasize this in a widely read series of publications from 1907 through his death in 1939
58
bull These writings left a legacy that would influence the practice of psychiatrymdashespecially psychotherapymdashfor the rest of the century
bull and lead to a true schism between religion and mental health care
59
bull That schism was illustrated in 1993 by a systematic review of the religious content of DSM-III-R which found nearly one-quarter of all cases of mental illness being described using religious illustrations [12]
60
bull The conflict has continued to the present day Consider recent e-letters in response to two articles published in The Psychiatristthinspabout this topic [13 14] and an even more recent debate about the role of prayer in psychiatric practice [15]
61
bull This conflict has manifested in the clinical work of many mental health professionals who have generally ignored the religious resources of patients or viewed them as pathological
62
bull Consider that a recent national survey of US psychiatrists found that 56 said they never rarely or only sometimes inquire about religiousspiritual issues in patients with depression or anxiety [16]
63
![Page 24: Religion, Spirituality, and Health · Review Article •Religion, Spirituality, and Health: • The Research and Clinical Implications • - Koenig, Harold G. "Religion, spirituality,](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022062605/5fcb0bcd7925581572559072/html5/thumbnails/24.jpg)
where positive outcomes
bull include
bull well-being
bull happiness
bull hope
bull optimism
bull and gratefulness
24
and negative outcomes
bull Involve bull depression bull suicide bull anxiety bull psychosis bull substance abuse bull delinquencycrime bull marital instability bull and personality traits (positive and negative)
25
bull I then explain how and why RS might influence mental health
26
Next I review research on RS and health behaviors such as
bull physical activity
bull cigarette smoking
bull diet
bull and sexual practices
27
followed by a review of relationships between RS and
1 heart disease 2 hypertension 3 cerebrovascular disease 4 Alzheimers disease and dementia 5 immune functions 6 endocrine functions 7 cancer 8 overall mortality 9 physical disability 10 pain and somatic symptoms
28
I then present
bull a theoretical model explaining how RS might influence physical health
29
Finally bull I discuss what health professionals should do in
light of these research findings and make recommendations in this regard
30
31
سر تیترها
فهرست مطالب بطور کاملتر شامل موارد ذیل می باشندbull
32
4 Religion Spirituality and Mental Health
bull 41 Coping with Adversity
bull 42 Positive Emotions
bull 421 Well-BeingHappiness
bull 422 Hope
bull 423 Optimism
bull 424 Meaning and Purpose
bull 425 Self-Esteem
bull 426 Sense of Control
bull 427 Positive Character Traits 33
and negative outcomes
bull 43 Depression
bull 44 Suicide
bull 45 Anxiety
bull 46 Psychotic DisorderSchizophrenia
bull 47 Bipolar Disorder
bull 48 Personality Traits
bull 49 Substance Abuse
bull 410 Social Problems
bull 4101 DelinquencyCrime
bull 4102 Marital Instability
bull 4103 Social Support
bull 4104 Social Capitalسرمایه اجتماعی
34
bull 5 Explaining the Relationship RS and Mental Health
35
6 Religion Spirituality and Health Behaviors
bull 61 Cigarette Smoking
bull 62 Exercise
bull 63 Diet
bull 64 Weight
bull 65 Sexual Behavior
36
7 Religion Spirituality and Physical Health
bull 71 Coronary Heart Disease (CHD) bull 72 Hypertension bull 73 Cerebrovascular Disease bull 74 Alzheimerrsquos Disease and Dementia bull 75 Immune Function bull 76 Endocrine Function bull 77 Cancer bull 78 Physical Functioning bull 79 Self-Rated Health مراقبتی خود
bull 710 Pain and Somatic Symptoms bull 711 Mortality
37
8 Explaining the Relationship RS and Physical Health
bull 81 Psychological
bull 82 Social
bull 83 Health Behaviors
bull 84 Other Pathways
38
9 Clinical Implications
bull 91 Rationale for Integrating Spirituality
bull 92 How to Integrate Spirituality into Patient Care
bull 10 Conclusions
39
bull Conflict of Interests
bull Acknowledgment
bull References 601
40
bull The support to write this paper was provided in part by the John Templeton Foundation
41
bull - Koenig Harold G Religion spirituality and health The research and clinical implications
International Scholarly Research Notices 2012 (2012) اعالمیه های بین المللی تحقیقات علمی
42
Review Article bull Religion Spirituality and Health The
Research and Clinical Implications
bull - Koenig Harold G Religion spirituality and health The research and clinical implications International
Scholarly Research Notices 2012 (2012) اعالمیه های بین المللی تحقیقات علمی
43
1 Historical Background and Introduction
bull Religion medicine and healthcare have been related in one way or another in all population groups since the beginning of recorded history
44
bull Only in recent times have these systems of healing been separated
bull and this separation has occurred largely in highly developed nations
bull in many developing countries there is little or no such separation
45
bull The history of religion medicine and healthcare in developed countries of the West though is a fascinating one
bull The first hospitals in the West for the care of the sick in the general population were built by religious organizations and staffed by religious orders
46
bull Throughout the Middle Ages and up through the French Revolution physicians were often clergy
bull For hundreds of years in fact religious institutions were responsible for licensing physicians to practice medicine
bull In the American colonies in particular many of the clergy were also physiciansmdashoften as a second job that helped to supplement their meager income from church work
47
bull Care for those with mental health problems in the West also had its roots within monasteries and religious communities [2]
bull In 1247 the Priory of St Mary of Bethlehem was built in London on the Thames River [3]
48
bull Originally designed to house ldquodistracted peoplerdquo this was Europersquos (and perhaps the worldrsquos) first mental hospital
bull In 1547 however St Maryrsquos was torn down and replaced by Bethlehem or Bethlem Hospital [4]
49
bull Over the years as secular authorities took control over the institution the hospital became famous for its inhumane treatment of the mentally ill who were often chained [5]thinspdunked in water or beaten as necessary to control them
bull In later years an admission fee (2 pence) was charged to the general public to observe the patients abusing themselves or other patients [4]
50
bull The hospital eventually became known as ldquobedlamrdquo (from which comes the word used today to indicate a state of confusion and disarray)
51
bull In response to the abuses in mental hospitals and precipitated by the death of a Quaker patient in New York asylum in England an English merchant and devout Quaker named William Tuke began to promote a new form of treatment of the mentally ill called ldquomoral treatmentrdquo
52
bull In 1796 he and the Quaker community in England established their own asylum known as the York Retreat [6]
53
bull Not long after this the Quakers brought moral treatment to America where it became the dominant form of psychiatric care in that country [6]
54
bull Established in Philadelphia by the Quakers in 1813 ldquoFriends Hospitalrdquo (or Friends Asylum) became the first private institution in the United States dedicated solely to the care of those with mental illness [7]
55
bull Psychiatric hospitals that followed in the footsteps of Friends Asylum were the McLean Hospital (established in 1818 in Boston and now associated with Harvard) the Bloomingdale Asylum (established in 1821 in New York) and the Hartford Retreat (established in 1824 in Connecticut)mdashall modeled after the York Retreat and implementing moral treatment as the dominant therapy
56
bull It was not until modern times that religion and psychiatry began to part paths
bull This separation was encouraged by the psychiatrist Sigmund Freud
57
bull After being ldquointroducedrdquo to the neurotic and hysterical aspects of religion by the famous French neurologist Jean Charcot in the mid-1880s
bull Freud began to emphasize this in a widely read series of publications from 1907 through his death in 1939
58
bull These writings left a legacy that would influence the practice of psychiatrymdashespecially psychotherapymdashfor the rest of the century
bull and lead to a true schism between religion and mental health care
59
bull That schism was illustrated in 1993 by a systematic review of the religious content of DSM-III-R which found nearly one-quarter of all cases of mental illness being described using religious illustrations [12]
60
bull The conflict has continued to the present day Consider recent e-letters in response to two articles published in The Psychiatristthinspabout this topic [13 14] and an even more recent debate about the role of prayer in psychiatric practice [15]
61
bull This conflict has manifested in the clinical work of many mental health professionals who have generally ignored the religious resources of patients or viewed them as pathological
62
bull Consider that a recent national survey of US psychiatrists found that 56 said they never rarely or only sometimes inquire about religiousspiritual issues in patients with depression or anxiety [16]
63
![Page 25: Religion, Spirituality, and Health · Review Article •Religion, Spirituality, and Health: • The Research and Clinical Implications • - Koenig, Harold G. "Religion, spirituality,](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022062605/5fcb0bcd7925581572559072/html5/thumbnails/25.jpg)
and negative outcomes
bull Involve bull depression bull suicide bull anxiety bull psychosis bull substance abuse bull delinquencycrime bull marital instability bull and personality traits (positive and negative)
25
bull I then explain how and why RS might influence mental health
26
Next I review research on RS and health behaviors such as
bull physical activity
bull cigarette smoking
bull diet
bull and sexual practices
27
followed by a review of relationships between RS and
1 heart disease 2 hypertension 3 cerebrovascular disease 4 Alzheimers disease and dementia 5 immune functions 6 endocrine functions 7 cancer 8 overall mortality 9 physical disability 10 pain and somatic symptoms
28
I then present
bull a theoretical model explaining how RS might influence physical health
29
Finally bull I discuss what health professionals should do in
light of these research findings and make recommendations in this regard
30
31
سر تیترها
فهرست مطالب بطور کاملتر شامل موارد ذیل می باشندbull
32
4 Religion Spirituality and Mental Health
bull 41 Coping with Adversity
bull 42 Positive Emotions
bull 421 Well-BeingHappiness
bull 422 Hope
bull 423 Optimism
bull 424 Meaning and Purpose
bull 425 Self-Esteem
bull 426 Sense of Control
bull 427 Positive Character Traits 33
and negative outcomes
bull 43 Depression
bull 44 Suicide
bull 45 Anxiety
bull 46 Psychotic DisorderSchizophrenia
bull 47 Bipolar Disorder
bull 48 Personality Traits
bull 49 Substance Abuse
bull 410 Social Problems
bull 4101 DelinquencyCrime
bull 4102 Marital Instability
bull 4103 Social Support
bull 4104 Social Capitalسرمایه اجتماعی
34
bull 5 Explaining the Relationship RS and Mental Health
35
6 Religion Spirituality and Health Behaviors
bull 61 Cigarette Smoking
bull 62 Exercise
bull 63 Diet
bull 64 Weight
bull 65 Sexual Behavior
36
7 Religion Spirituality and Physical Health
bull 71 Coronary Heart Disease (CHD) bull 72 Hypertension bull 73 Cerebrovascular Disease bull 74 Alzheimerrsquos Disease and Dementia bull 75 Immune Function bull 76 Endocrine Function bull 77 Cancer bull 78 Physical Functioning bull 79 Self-Rated Health مراقبتی خود
bull 710 Pain and Somatic Symptoms bull 711 Mortality
37
8 Explaining the Relationship RS and Physical Health
bull 81 Psychological
bull 82 Social
bull 83 Health Behaviors
bull 84 Other Pathways
38
9 Clinical Implications
bull 91 Rationale for Integrating Spirituality
bull 92 How to Integrate Spirituality into Patient Care
bull 10 Conclusions
39
bull Conflict of Interests
bull Acknowledgment
bull References 601
40
bull The support to write this paper was provided in part by the John Templeton Foundation
41
bull - Koenig Harold G Religion spirituality and health The research and clinical implications
International Scholarly Research Notices 2012 (2012) اعالمیه های بین المللی تحقیقات علمی
42
Review Article bull Religion Spirituality and Health The
Research and Clinical Implications
bull - Koenig Harold G Religion spirituality and health The research and clinical implications International
Scholarly Research Notices 2012 (2012) اعالمیه های بین المللی تحقیقات علمی
43
1 Historical Background and Introduction
bull Religion medicine and healthcare have been related in one way or another in all population groups since the beginning of recorded history
44
bull Only in recent times have these systems of healing been separated
bull and this separation has occurred largely in highly developed nations
bull in many developing countries there is little or no such separation
45
bull The history of religion medicine and healthcare in developed countries of the West though is a fascinating one
bull The first hospitals in the West for the care of the sick in the general population were built by religious organizations and staffed by religious orders
46
bull Throughout the Middle Ages and up through the French Revolution physicians were often clergy
bull For hundreds of years in fact religious institutions were responsible for licensing physicians to practice medicine
bull In the American colonies in particular many of the clergy were also physiciansmdashoften as a second job that helped to supplement their meager income from church work
47
bull Care for those with mental health problems in the West also had its roots within monasteries and religious communities [2]
bull In 1247 the Priory of St Mary of Bethlehem was built in London on the Thames River [3]
48
bull Originally designed to house ldquodistracted peoplerdquo this was Europersquos (and perhaps the worldrsquos) first mental hospital
bull In 1547 however St Maryrsquos was torn down and replaced by Bethlehem or Bethlem Hospital [4]
49
bull Over the years as secular authorities took control over the institution the hospital became famous for its inhumane treatment of the mentally ill who were often chained [5]thinspdunked in water or beaten as necessary to control them
bull In later years an admission fee (2 pence) was charged to the general public to observe the patients abusing themselves or other patients [4]
50
bull The hospital eventually became known as ldquobedlamrdquo (from which comes the word used today to indicate a state of confusion and disarray)
51
bull In response to the abuses in mental hospitals and precipitated by the death of a Quaker patient in New York asylum in England an English merchant and devout Quaker named William Tuke began to promote a new form of treatment of the mentally ill called ldquomoral treatmentrdquo
52
bull In 1796 he and the Quaker community in England established their own asylum known as the York Retreat [6]
53
bull Not long after this the Quakers brought moral treatment to America where it became the dominant form of psychiatric care in that country [6]
54
bull Established in Philadelphia by the Quakers in 1813 ldquoFriends Hospitalrdquo (or Friends Asylum) became the first private institution in the United States dedicated solely to the care of those with mental illness [7]
55
bull Psychiatric hospitals that followed in the footsteps of Friends Asylum were the McLean Hospital (established in 1818 in Boston and now associated with Harvard) the Bloomingdale Asylum (established in 1821 in New York) and the Hartford Retreat (established in 1824 in Connecticut)mdashall modeled after the York Retreat and implementing moral treatment as the dominant therapy
56
bull It was not until modern times that religion and psychiatry began to part paths
bull This separation was encouraged by the psychiatrist Sigmund Freud
57
bull After being ldquointroducedrdquo to the neurotic and hysterical aspects of religion by the famous French neurologist Jean Charcot in the mid-1880s
bull Freud began to emphasize this in a widely read series of publications from 1907 through his death in 1939
58
bull These writings left a legacy that would influence the practice of psychiatrymdashespecially psychotherapymdashfor the rest of the century
bull and lead to a true schism between religion and mental health care
59
bull That schism was illustrated in 1993 by a systematic review of the religious content of DSM-III-R which found nearly one-quarter of all cases of mental illness being described using religious illustrations [12]
60
bull The conflict has continued to the present day Consider recent e-letters in response to two articles published in The Psychiatristthinspabout this topic [13 14] and an even more recent debate about the role of prayer in psychiatric practice [15]
61
bull This conflict has manifested in the clinical work of many mental health professionals who have generally ignored the religious resources of patients or viewed them as pathological
62
bull Consider that a recent national survey of US psychiatrists found that 56 said they never rarely or only sometimes inquire about religiousspiritual issues in patients with depression or anxiety [16]
63
![Page 26: Religion, Spirituality, and Health · Review Article •Religion, Spirituality, and Health: • The Research and Clinical Implications • - Koenig, Harold G. "Religion, spirituality,](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022062605/5fcb0bcd7925581572559072/html5/thumbnails/26.jpg)
bull I then explain how and why RS might influence mental health
26
Next I review research on RS and health behaviors such as
bull physical activity
bull cigarette smoking
bull diet
bull and sexual practices
27
followed by a review of relationships between RS and
1 heart disease 2 hypertension 3 cerebrovascular disease 4 Alzheimers disease and dementia 5 immune functions 6 endocrine functions 7 cancer 8 overall mortality 9 physical disability 10 pain and somatic symptoms
28
I then present
bull a theoretical model explaining how RS might influence physical health
29
Finally bull I discuss what health professionals should do in
light of these research findings and make recommendations in this regard
30
31
سر تیترها
فهرست مطالب بطور کاملتر شامل موارد ذیل می باشندbull
32
4 Religion Spirituality and Mental Health
bull 41 Coping with Adversity
bull 42 Positive Emotions
bull 421 Well-BeingHappiness
bull 422 Hope
bull 423 Optimism
bull 424 Meaning and Purpose
bull 425 Self-Esteem
bull 426 Sense of Control
bull 427 Positive Character Traits 33
and negative outcomes
bull 43 Depression
bull 44 Suicide
bull 45 Anxiety
bull 46 Psychotic DisorderSchizophrenia
bull 47 Bipolar Disorder
bull 48 Personality Traits
bull 49 Substance Abuse
bull 410 Social Problems
bull 4101 DelinquencyCrime
bull 4102 Marital Instability
bull 4103 Social Support
bull 4104 Social Capitalسرمایه اجتماعی
34
bull 5 Explaining the Relationship RS and Mental Health
35
6 Religion Spirituality and Health Behaviors
bull 61 Cigarette Smoking
bull 62 Exercise
bull 63 Diet
bull 64 Weight
bull 65 Sexual Behavior
36
7 Religion Spirituality and Physical Health
bull 71 Coronary Heart Disease (CHD) bull 72 Hypertension bull 73 Cerebrovascular Disease bull 74 Alzheimerrsquos Disease and Dementia bull 75 Immune Function bull 76 Endocrine Function bull 77 Cancer bull 78 Physical Functioning bull 79 Self-Rated Health مراقبتی خود
bull 710 Pain and Somatic Symptoms bull 711 Mortality
37
8 Explaining the Relationship RS and Physical Health
bull 81 Psychological
bull 82 Social
bull 83 Health Behaviors
bull 84 Other Pathways
38
9 Clinical Implications
bull 91 Rationale for Integrating Spirituality
bull 92 How to Integrate Spirituality into Patient Care
bull 10 Conclusions
39
bull Conflict of Interests
bull Acknowledgment
bull References 601
40
bull The support to write this paper was provided in part by the John Templeton Foundation
41
bull - Koenig Harold G Religion spirituality and health The research and clinical implications
International Scholarly Research Notices 2012 (2012) اعالمیه های بین المللی تحقیقات علمی
42
Review Article bull Religion Spirituality and Health The
Research and Clinical Implications
bull - Koenig Harold G Religion spirituality and health The research and clinical implications International
Scholarly Research Notices 2012 (2012) اعالمیه های بین المللی تحقیقات علمی
43
1 Historical Background and Introduction
bull Religion medicine and healthcare have been related in one way or another in all population groups since the beginning of recorded history
44
bull Only in recent times have these systems of healing been separated
bull and this separation has occurred largely in highly developed nations
bull in many developing countries there is little or no such separation
45
bull The history of religion medicine and healthcare in developed countries of the West though is a fascinating one
bull The first hospitals in the West for the care of the sick in the general population were built by religious organizations and staffed by religious orders
46
bull Throughout the Middle Ages and up through the French Revolution physicians were often clergy
bull For hundreds of years in fact religious institutions were responsible for licensing physicians to practice medicine
bull In the American colonies in particular many of the clergy were also physiciansmdashoften as a second job that helped to supplement their meager income from church work
47
bull Care for those with mental health problems in the West also had its roots within monasteries and religious communities [2]
bull In 1247 the Priory of St Mary of Bethlehem was built in London on the Thames River [3]
48
bull Originally designed to house ldquodistracted peoplerdquo this was Europersquos (and perhaps the worldrsquos) first mental hospital
bull In 1547 however St Maryrsquos was torn down and replaced by Bethlehem or Bethlem Hospital [4]
49
bull Over the years as secular authorities took control over the institution the hospital became famous for its inhumane treatment of the mentally ill who were often chained [5]thinspdunked in water or beaten as necessary to control them
bull In later years an admission fee (2 pence) was charged to the general public to observe the patients abusing themselves or other patients [4]
50
bull The hospital eventually became known as ldquobedlamrdquo (from which comes the word used today to indicate a state of confusion and disarray)
51
bull In response to the abuses in mental hospitals and precipitated by the death of a Quaker patient in New York asylum in England an English merchant and devout Quaker named William Tuke began to promote a new form of treatment of the mentally ill called ldquomoral treatmentrdquo
52
bull In 1796 he and the Quaker community in England established their own asylum known as the York Retreat [6]
53
bull Not long after this the Quakers brought moral treatment to America where it became the dominant form of psychiatric care in that country [6]
54
bull Established in Philadelphia by the Quakers in 1813 ldquoFriends Hospitalrdquo (or Friends Asylum) became the first private institution in the United States dedicated solely to the care of those with mental illness [7]
55
bull Psychiatric hospitals that followed in the footsteps of Friends Asylum were the McLean Hospital (established in 1818 in Boston and now associated with Harvard) the Bloomingdale Asylum (established in 1821 in New York) and the Hartford Retreat (established in 1824 in Connecticut)mdashall modeled after the York Retreat and implementing moral treatment as the dominant therapy
56
bull It was not until modern times that religion and psychiatry began to part paths
bull This separation was encouraged by the psychiatrist Sigmund Freud
57
bull After being ldquointroducedrdquo to the neurotic and hysterical aspects of religion by the famous French neurologist Jean Charcot in the mid-1880s
bull Freud began to emphasize this in a widely read series of publications from 1907 through his death in 1939
58
bull These writings left a legacy that would influence the practice of psychiatrymdashespecially psychotherapymdashfor the rest of the century
bull and lead to a true schism between religion and mental health care
59
bull That schism was illustrated in 1993 by a systematic review of the religious content of DSM-III-R which found nearly one-quarter of all cases of mental illness being described using religious illustrations [12]
60
bull The conflict has continued to the present day Consider recent e-letters in response to two articles published in The Psychiatristthinspabout this topic [13 14] and an even more recent debate about the role of prayer in psychiatric practice [15]
61
bull This conflict has manifested in the clinical work of many mental health professionals who have generally ignored the religious resources of patients or viewed them as pathological
62
bull Consider that a recent national survey of US psychiatrists found that 56 said they never rarely or only sometimes inquire about religiousspiritual issues in patients with depression or anxiety [16]
63
![Page 27: Religion, Spirituality, and Health · Review Article •Religion, Spirituality, and Health: • The Research and Clinical Implications • - Koenig, Harold G. "Religion, spirituality,](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022062605/5fcb0bcd7925581572559072/html5/thumbnails/27.jpg)
Next I review research on RS and health behaviors such as
bull physical activity
bull cigarette smoking
bull diet
bull and sexual practices
27
followed by a review of relationships between RS and
1 heart disease 2 hypertension 3 cerebrovascular disease 4 Alzheimers disease and dementia 5 immune functions 6 endocrine functions 7 cancer 8 overall mortality 9 physical disability 10 pain and somatic symptoms
28
I then present
bull a theoretical model explaining how RS might influence physical health
29
Finally bull I discuss what health professionals should do in
light of these research findings and make recommendations in this regard
30
31
سر تیترها
فهرست مطالب بطور کاملتر شامل موارد ذیل می باشندbull
32
4 Religion Spirituality and Mental Health
bull 41 Coping with Adversity
bull 42 Positive Emotions
bull 421 Well-BeingHappiness
bull 422 Hope
bull 423 Optimism
bull 424 Meaning and Purpose
bull 425 Self-Esteem
bull 426 Sense of Control
bull 427 Positive Character Traits 33
and negative outcomes
bull 43 Depression
bull 44 Suicide
bull 45 Anxiety
bull 46 Psychotic DisorderSchizophrenia
bull 47 Bipolar Disorder
bull 48 Personality Traits
bull 49 Substance Abuse
bull 410 Social Problems
bull 4101 DelinquencyCrime
bull 4102 Marital Instability
bull 4103 Social Support
bull 4104 Social Capitalسرمایه اجتماعی
34
bull 5 Explaining the Relationship RS and Mental Health
35
6 Religion Spirituality and Health Behaviors
bull 61 Cigarette Smoking
bull 62 Exercise
bull 63 Diet
bull 64 Weight
bull 65 Sexual Behavior
36
7 Religion Spirituality and Physical Health
bull 71 Coronary Heart Disease (CHD) bull 72 Hypertension bull 73 Cerebrovascular Disease bull 74 Alzheimerrsquos Disease and Dementia bull 75 Immune Function bull 76 Endocrine Function bull 77 Cancer bull 78 Physical Functioning bull 79 Self-Rated Health مراقبتی خود
bull 710 Pain and Somatic Symptoms bull 711 Mortality
37
8 Explaining the Relationship RS and Physical Health
bull 81 Psychological
bull 82 Social
bull 83 Health Behaviors
bull 84 Other Pathways
38
9 Clinical Implications
bull 91 Rationale for Integrating Spirituality
bull 92 How to Integrate Spirituality into Patient Care
bull 10 Conclusions
39
bull Conflict of Interests
bull Acknowledgment
bull References 601
40
bull The support to write this paper was provided in part by the John Templeton Foundation
41
bull - Koenig Harold G Religion spirituality and health The research and clinical implications
International Scholarly Research Notices 2012 (2012) اعالمیه های بین المللی تحقیقات علمی
42
Review Article bull Religion Spirituality and Health The
Research and Clinical Implications
bull - Koenig Harold G Religion spirituality and health The research and clinical implications International
Scholarly Research Notices 2012 (2012) اعالمیه های بین المللی تحقیقات علمی
43
1 Historical Background and Introduction
bull Religion medicine and healthcare have been related in one way or another in all population groups since the beginning of recorded history
44
bull Only in recent times have these systems of healing been separated
bull and this separation has occurred largely in highly developed nations
bull in many developing countries there is little or no such separation
45
bull The history of religion medicine and healthcare in developed countries of the West though is a fascinating one
bull The first hospitals in the West for the care of the sick in the general population were built by religious organizations and staffed by religious orders
46
bull Throughout the Middle Ages and up through the French Revolution physicians were often clergy
bull For hundreds of years in fact religious institutions were responsible for licensing physicians to practice medicine
bull In the American colonies in particular many of the clergy were also physiciansmdashoften as a second job that helped to supplement their meager income from church work
47
bull Care for those with mental health problems in the West also had its roots within monasteries and religious communities [2]
bull In 1247 the Priory of St Mary of Bethlehem was built in London on the Thames River [3]
48
bull Originally designed to house ldquodistracted peoplerdquo this was Europersquos (and perhaps the worldrsquos) first mental hospital
bull In 1547 however St Maryrsquos was torn down and replaced by Bethlehem or Bethlem Hospital [4]
49
bull Over the years as secular authorities took control over the institution the hospital became famous for its inhumane treatment of the mentally ill who were often chained [5]thinspdunked in water or beaten as necessary to control them
bull In later years an admission fee (2 pence) was charged to the general public to observe the patients abusing themselves or other patients [4]
50
bull The hospital eventually became known as ldquobedlamrdquo (from which comes the word used today to indicate a state of confusion and disarray)
51
bull In response to the abuses in mental hospitals and precipitated by the death of a Quaker patient in New York asylum in England an English merchant and devout Quaker named William Tuke began to promote a new form of treatment of the mentally ill called ldquomoral treatmentrdquo
52
bull In 1796 he and the Quaker community in England established their own asylum known as the York Retreat [6]
53
bull Not long after this the Quakers brought moral treatment to America where it became the dominant form of psychiatric care in that country [6]
54
bull Established in Philadelphia by the Quakers in 1813 ldquoFriends Hospitalrdquo (or Friends Asylum) became the first private institution in the United States dedicated solely to the care of those with mental illness [7]
55
bull Psychiatric hospitals that followed in the footsteps of Friends Asylum were the McLean Hospital (established in 1818 in Boston and now associated with Harvard) the Bloomingdale Asylum (established in 1821 in New York) and the Hartford Retreat (established in 1824 in Connecticut)mdashall modeled after the York Retreat and implementing moral treatment as the dominant therapy
56
bull It was not until modern times that religion and psychiatry began to part paths
bull This separation was encouraged by the psychiatrist Sigmund Freud
57
bull After being ldquointroducedrdquo to the neurotic and hysterical aspects of religion by the famous French neurologist Jean Charcot in the mid-1880s
bull Freud began to emphasize this in a widely read series of publications from 1907 through his death in 1939
58
bull These writings left a legacy that would influence the practice of psychiatrymdashespecially psychotherapymdashfor the rest of the century
bull and lead to a true schism between religion and mental health care
59
bull That schism was illustrated in 1993 by a systematic review of the religious content of DSM-III-R which found nearly one-quarter of all cases of mental illness being described using religious illustrations [12]
60
bull The conflict has continued to the present day Consider recent e-letters in response to two articles published in The Psychiatristthinspabout this topic [13 14] and an even more recent debate about the role of prayer in psychiatric practice [15]
61
bull This conflict has manifested in the clinical work of many mental health professionals who have generally ignored the religious resources of patients or viewed them as pathological
62
bull Consider that a recent national survey of US psychiatrists found that 56 said they never rarely or only sometimes inquire about religiousspiritual issues in patients with depression or anxiety [16]
63
![Page 28: Religion, Spirituality, and Health · Review Article •Religion, Spirituality, and Health: • The Research and Clinical Implications • - Koenig, Harold G. "Religion, spirituality,](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022062605/5fcb0bcd7925581572559072/html5/thumbnails/28.jpg)
followed by a review of relationships between RS and
1 heart disease 2 hypertension 3 cerebrovascular disease 4 Alzheimers disease and dementia 5 immune functions 6 endocrine functions 7 cancer 8 overall mortality 9 physical disability 10 pain and somatic symptoms
28
I then present
bull a theoretical model explaining how RS might influence physical health
29
Finally bull I discuss what health professionals should do in
light of these research findings and make recommendations in this regard
30
31
سر تیترها
فهرست مطالب بطور کاملتر شامل موارد ذیل می باشندbull
32
4 Religion Spirituality and Mental Health
bull 41 Coping with Adversity
bull 42 Positive Emotions
bull 421 Well-BeingHappiness
bull 422 Hope
bull 423 Optimism
bull 424 Meaning and Purpose
bull 425 Self-Esteem
bull 426 Sense of Control
bull 427 Positive Character Traits 33
and negative outcomes
bull 43 Depression
bull 44 Suicide
bull 45 Anxiety
bull 46 Psychotic DisorderSchizophrenia
bull 47 Bipolar Disorder
bull 48 Personality Traits
bull 49 Substance Abuse
bull 410 Social Problems
bull 4101 DelinquencyCrime
bull 4102 Marital Instability
bull 4103 Social Support
bull 4104 Social Capitalسرمایه اجتماعی
34
bull 5 Explaining the Relationship RS and Mental Health
35
6 Religion Spirituality and Health Behaviors
bull 61 Cigarette Smoking
bull 62 Exercise
bull 63 Diet
bull 64 Weight
bull 65 Sexual Behavior
36
7 Religion Spirituality and Physical Health
bull 71 Coronary Heart Disease (CHD) bull 72 Hypertension bull 73 Cerebrovascular Disease bull 74 Alzheimerrsquos Disease and Dementia bull 75 Immune Function bull 76 Endocrine Function bull 77 Cancer bull 78 Physical Functioning bull 79 Self-Rated Health مراقبتی خود
bull 710 Pain and Somatic Symptoms bull 711 Mortality
37
8 Explaining the Relationship RS and Physical Health
bull 81 Psychological
bull 82 Social
bull 83 Health Behaviors
bull 84 Other Pathways
38
9 Clinical Implications
bull 91 Rationale for Integrating Spirituality
bull 92 How to Integrate Spirituality into Patient Care
bull 10 Conclusions
39
bull Conflict of Interests
bull Acknowledgment
bull References 601
40
bull The support to write this paper was provided in part by the John Templeton Foundation
41
bull - Koenig Harold G Religion spirituality and health The research and clinical implications
International Scholarly Research Notices 2012 (2012) اعالمیه های بین المللی تحقیقات علمی
42
Review Article bull Religion Spirituality and Health The
Research and Clinical Implications
bull - Koenig Harold G Religion spirituality and health The research and clinical implications International
Scholarly Research Notices 2012 (2012) اعالمیه های بین المللی تحقیقات علمی
43
1 Historical Background and Introduction
bull Religion medicine and healthcare have been related in one way or another in all population groups since the beginning of recorded history
44
bull Only in recent times have these systems of healing been separated
bull and this separation has occurred largely in highly developed nations
bull in many developing countries there is little or no such separation
45
bull The history of religion medicine and healthcare in developed countries of the West though is a fascinating one
bull The first hospitals in the West for the care of the sick in the general population were built by religious organizations and staffed by religious orders
46
bull Throughout the Middle Ages and up through the French Revolution physicians were often clergy
bull For hundreds of years in fact religious institutions were responsible for licensing physicians to practice medicine
bull In the American colonies in particular many of the clergy were also physiciansmdashoften as a second job that helped to supplement their meager income from church work
47
bull Care for those with mental health problems in the West also had its roots within monasteries and religious communities [2]
bull In 1247 the Priory of St Mary of Bethlehem was built in London on the Thames River [3]
48
bull Originally designed to house ldquodistracted peoplerdquo this was Europersquos (and perhaps the worldrsquos) first mental hospital
bull In 1547 however St Maryrsquos was torn down and replaced by Bethlehem or Bethlem Hospital [4]
49
bull Over the years as secular authorities took control over the institution the hospital became famous for its inhumane treatment of the mentally ill who were often chained [5]thinspdunked in water or beaten as necessary to control them
bull In later years an admission fee (2 pence) was charged to the general public to observe the patients abusing themselves or other patients [4]
50
bull The hospital eventually became known as ldquobedlamrdquo (from which comes the word used today to indicate a state of confusion and disarray)
51
bull In response to the abuses in mental hospitals and precipitated by the death of a Quaker patient in New York asylum in England an English merchant and devout Quaker named William Tuke began to promote a new form of treatment of the mentally ill called ldquomoral treatmentrdquo
52
bull In 1796 he and the Quaker community in England established their own asylum known as the York Retreat [6]
53
bull Not long after this the Quakers brought moral treatment to America where it became the dominant form of psychiatric care in that country [6]
54
bull Established in Philadelphia by the Quakers in 1813 ldquoFriends Hospitalrdquo (or Friends Asylum) became the first private institution in the United States dedicated solely to the care of those with mental illness [7]
55
bull Psychiatric hospitals that followed in the footsteps of Friends Asylum were the McLean Hospital (established in 1818 in Boston and now associated with Harvard) the Bloomingdale Asylum (established in 1821 in New York) and the Hartford Retreat (established in 1824 in Connecticut)mdashall modeled after the York Retreat and implementing moral treatment as the dominant therapy
56
bull It was not until modern times that religion and psychiatry began to part paths
bull This separation was encouraged by the psychiatrist Sigmund Freud
57
bull After being ldquointroducedrdquo to the neurotic and hysterical aspects of religion by the famous French neurologist Jean Charcot in the mid-1880s
bull Freud began to emphasize this in a widely read series of publications from 1907 through his death in 1939
58
bull These writings left a legacy that would influence the practice of psychiatrymdashespecially psychotherapymdashfor the rest of the century
bull and lead to a true schism between religion and mental health care
59
bull That schism was illustrated in 1993 by a systematic review of the religious content of DSM-III-R which found nearly one-quarter of all cases of mental illness being described using religious illustrations [12]
60
bull The conflict has continued to the present day Consider recent e-letters in response to two articles published in The Psychiatristthinspabout this topic [13 14] and an even more recent debate about the role of prayer in psychiatric practice [15]
61
bull This conflict has manifested in the clinical work of many mental health professionals who have generally ignored the religious resources of patients or viewed them as pathological
62
bull Consider that a recent national survey of US psychiatrists found that 56 said they never rarely or only sometimes inquire about religiousspiritual issues in patients with depression or anxiety [16]
63
![Page 29: Religion, Spirituality, and Health · Review Article •Religion, Spirituality, and Health: • The Research and Clinical Implications • - Koenig, Harold G. "Religion, spirituality,](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022062605/5fcb0bcd7925581572559072/html5/thumbnails/29.jpg)
I then present
bull a theoretical model explaining how RS might influence physical health
29
Finally bull I discuss what health professionals should do in
light of these research findings and make recommendations in this regard
30
31
سر تیترها
فهرست مطالب بطور کاملتر شامل موارد ذیل می باشندbull
32
4 Religion Spirituality and Mental Health
bull 41 Coping with Adversity
bull 42 Positive Emotions
bull 421 Well-BeingHappiness
bull 422 Hope
bull 423 Optimism
bull 424 Meaning and Purpose
bull 425 Self-Esteem
bull 426 Sense of Control
bull 427 Positive Character Traits 33
and negative outcomes
bull 43 Depression
bull 44 Suicide
bull 45 Anxiety
bull 46 Psychotic DisorderSchizophrenia
bull 47 Bipolar Disorder
bull 48 Personality Traits
bull 49 Substance Abuse
bull 410 Social Problems
bull 4101 DelinquencyCrime
bull 4102 Marital Instability
bull 4103 Social Support
bull 4104 Social Capitalسرمایه اجتماعی
34
bull 5 Explaining the Relationship RS and Mental Health
35
6 Religion Spirituality and Health Behaviors
bull 61 Cigarette Smoking
bull 62 Exercise
bull 63 Diet
bull 64 Weight
bull 65 Sexual Behavior
36
7 Religion Spirituality and Physical Health
bull 71 Coronary Heart Disease (CHD) bull 72 Hypertension bull 73 Cerebrovascular Disease bull 74 Alzheimerrsquos Disease and Dementia bull 75 Immune Function bull 76 Endocrine Function bull 77 Cancer bull 78 Physical Functioning bull 79 Self-Rated Health مراقبتی خود
bull 710 Pain and Somatic Symptoms bull 711 Mortality
37
8 Explaining the Relationship RS and Physical Health
bull 81 Psychological
bull 82 Social
bull 83 Health Behaviors
bull 84 Other Pathways
38
9 Clinical Implications
bull 91 Rationale for Integrating Spirituality
bull 92 How to Integrate Spirituality into Patient Care
bull 10 Conclusions
39
bull Conflict of Interests
bull Acknowledgment
bull References 601
40
bull The support to write this paper was provided in part by the John Templeton Foundation
41
bull - Koenig Harold G Religion spirituality and health The research and clinical implications
International Scholarly Research Notices 2012 (2012) اعالمیه های بین المللی تحقیقات علمی
42
Review Article bull Religion Spirituality and Health The
Research and Clinical Implications
bull - Koenig Harold G Religion spirituality and health The research and clinical implications International
Scholarly Research Notices 2012 (2012) اعالمیه های بین المللی تحقیقات علمی
43
1 Historical Background and Introduction
bull Religion medicine and healthcare have been related in one way or another in all population groups since the beginning of recorded history
44
bull Only in recent times have these systems of healing been separated
bull and this separation has occurred largely in highly developed nations
bull in many developing countries there is little or no such separation
45
bull The history of religion medicine and healthcare in developed countries of the West though is a fascinating one
bull The first hospitals in the West for the care of the sick in the general population were built by religious organizations and staffed by religious orders
46
bull Throughout the Middle Ages and up through the French Revolution physicians were often clergy
bull For hundreds of years in fact religious institutions were responsible for licensing physicians to practice medicine
bull In the American colonies in particular many of the clergy were also physiciansmdashoften as a second job that helped to supplement their meager income from church work
47
bull Care for those with mental health problems in the West also had its roots within monasteries and religious communities [2]
bull In 1247 the Priory of St Mary of Bethlehem was built in London on the Thames River [3]
48
bull Originally designed to house ldquodistracted peoplerdquo this was Europersquos (and perhaps the worldrsquos) first mental hospital
bull In 1547 however St Maryrsquos was torn down and replaced by Bethlehem or Bethlem Hospital [4]
49
bull Over the years as secular authorities took control over the institution the hospital became famous for its inhumane treatment of the mentally ill who were often chained [5]thinspdunked in water or beaten as necessary to control them
bull In later years an admission fee (2 pence) was charged to the general public to observe the patients abusing themselves or other patients [4]
50
bull The hospital eventually became known as ldquobedlamrdquo (from which comes the word used today to indicate a state of confusion and disarray)
51
bull In response to the abuses in mental hospitals and precipitated by the death of a Quaker patient in New York asylum in England an English merchant and devout Quaker named William Tuke began to promote a new form of treatment of the mentally ill called ldquomoral treatmentrdquo
52
bull In 1796 he and the Quaker community in England established their own asylum known as the York Retreat [6]
53
bull Not long after this the Quakers brought moral treatment to America where it became the dominant form of psychiatric care in that country [6]
54
bull Established in Philadelphia by the Quakers in 1813 ldquoFriends Hospitalrdquo (or Friends Asylum) became the first private institution in the United States dedicated solely to the care of those with mental illness [7]
55
bull Psychiatric hospitals that followed in the footsteps of Friends Asylum were the McLean Hospital (established in 1818 in Boston and now associated with Harvard) the Bloomingdale Asylum (established in 1821 in New York) and the Hartford Retreat (established in 1824 in Connecticut)mdashall modeled after the York Retreat and implementing moral treatment as the dominant therapy
56
bull It was not until modern times that religion and psychiatry began to part paths
bull This separation was encouraged by the psychiatrist Sigmund Freud
57
bull After being ldquointroducedrdquo to the neurotic and hysterical aspects of religion by the famous French neurologist Jean Charcot in the mid-1880s
bull Freud began to emphasize this in a widely read series of publications from 1907 through his death in 1939
58
bull These writings left a legacy that would influence the practice of psychiatrymdashespecially psychotherapymdashfor the rest of the century
bull and lead to a true schism between religion and mental health care
59
bull That schism was illustrated in 1993 by a systematic review of the religious content of DSM-III-R which found nearly one-quarter of all cases of mental illness being described using religious illustrations [12]
60
bull The conflict has continued to the present day Consider recent e-letters in response to two articles published in The Psychiatristthinspabout this topic [13 14] and an even more recent debate about the role of prayer in psychiatric practice [15]
61
bull This conflict has manifested in the clinical work of many mental health professionals who have generally ignored the religious resources of patients or viewed them as pathological
62
bull Consider that a recent national survey of US psychiatrists found that 56 said they never rarely or only sometimes inquire about religiousspiritual issues in patients with depression or anxiety [16]
63
![Page 30: Religion, Spirituality, and Health · Review Article •Religion, Spirituality, and Health: • The Research and Clinical Implications • - Koenig, Harold G. "Religion, spirituality,](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022062605/5fcb0bcd7925581572559072/html5/thumbnails/30.jpg)
Finally bull I discuss what health professionals should do in
light of these research findings and make recommendations in this regard
30
31
سر تیترها
فهرست مطالب بطور کاملتر شامل موارد ذیل می باشندbull
32
4 Religion Spirituality and Mental Health
bull 41 Coping with Adversity
bull 42 Positive Emotions
bull 421 Well-BeingHappiness
bull 422 Hope
bull 423 Optimism
bull 424 Meaning and Purpose
bull 425 Self-Esteem
bull 426 Sense of Control
bull 427 Positive Character Traits 33
and negative outcomes
bull 43 Depression
bull 44 Suicide
bull 45 Anxiety
bull 46 Psychotic DisorderSchizophrenia
bull 47 Bipolar Disorder
bull 48 Personality Traits
bull 49 Substance Abuse
bull 410 Social Problems
bull 4101 DelinquencyCrime
bull 4102 Marital Instability
bull 4103 Social Support
bull 4104 Social Capitalسرمایه اجتماعی
34
bull 5 Explaining the Relationship RS and Mental Health
35
6 Religion Spirituality and Health Behaviors
bull 61 Cigarette Smoking
bull 62 Exercise
bull 63 Diet
bull 64 Weight
bull 65 Sexual Behavior
36
7 Religion Spirituality and Physical Health
bull 71 Coronary Heart Disease (CHD) bull 72 Hypertension bull 73 Cerebrovascular Disease bull 74 Alzheimerrsquos Disease and Dementia bull 75 Immune Function bull 76 Endocrine Function bull 77 Cancer bull 78 Physical Functioning bull 79 Self-Rated Health مراقبتی خود
bull 710 Pain and Somatic Symptoms bull 711 Mortality
37
8 Explaining the Relationship RS and Physical Health
bull 81 Psychological
bull 82 Social
bull 83 Health Behaviors
bull 84 Other Pathways
38
9 Clinical Implications
bull 91 Rationale for Integrating Spirituality
bull 92 How to Integrate Spirituality into Patient Care
bull 10 Conclusions
39
bull Conflict of Interests
bull Acknowledgment
bull References 601
40
bull The support to write this paper was provided in part by the John Templeton Foundation
41
bull - Koenig Harold G Religion spirituality and health The research and clinical implications
International Scholarly Research Notices 2012 (2012) اعالمیه های بین المللی تحقیقات علمی
42
Review Article bull Religion Spirituality and Health The
Research and Clinical Implications
bull - Koenig Harold G Religion spirituality and health The research and clinical implications International
Scholarly Research Notices 2012 (2012) اعالمیه های بین المللی تحقیقات علمی
43
1 Historical Background and Introduction
bull Religion medicine and healthcare have been related in one way or another in all population groups since the beginning of recorded history
44
bull Only in recent times have these systems of healing been separated
bull and this separation has occurred largely in highly developed nations
bull in many developing countries there is little or no such separation
45
bull The history of religion medicine and healthcare in developed countries of the West though is a fascinating one
bull The first hospitals in the West for the care of the sick in the general population were built by religious organizations and staffed by religious orders
46
bull Throughout the Middle Ages and up through the French Revolution physicians were often clergy
bull For hundreds of years in fact religious institutions were responsible for licensing physicians to practice medicine
bull In the American colonies in particular many of the clergy were also physiciansmdashoften as a second job that helped to supplement their meager income from church work
47
bull Care for those with mental health problems in the West also had its roots within monasteries and religious communities [2]
bull In 1247 the Priory of St Mary of Bethlehem was built in London on the Thames River [3]
48
bull Originally designed to house ldquodistracted peoplerdquo this was Europersquos (and perhaps the worldrsquos) first mental hospital
bull In 1547 however St Maryrsquos was torn down and replaced by Bethlehem or Bethlem Hospital [4]
49
bull Over the years as secular authorities took control over the institution the hospital became famous for its inhumane treatment of the mentally ill who were often chained [5]thinspdunked in water or beaten as necessary to control them
bull In later years an admission fee (2 pence) was charged to the general public to observe the patients abusing themselves or other patients [4]
50
bull The hospital eventually became known as ldquobedlamrdquo (from which comes the word used today to indicate a state of confusion and disarray)
51
bull In response to the abuses in mental hospitals and precipitated by the death of a Quaker patient in New York asylum in England an English merchant and devout Quaker named William Tuke began to promote a new form of treatment of the mentally ill called ldquomoral treatmentrdquo
52
bull In 1796 he and the Quaker community in England established their own asylum known as the York Retreat [6]
53
bull Not long after this the Quakers brought moral treatment to America where it became the dominant form of psychiatric care in that country [6]
54
bull Established in Philadelphia by the Quakers in 1813 ldquoFriends Hospitalrdquo (or Friends Asylum) became the first private institution in the United States dedicated solely to the care of those with mental illness [7]
55
bull Psychiatric hospitals that followed in the footsteps of Friends Asylum were the McLean Hospital (established in 1818 in Boston and now associated with Harvard) the Bloomingdale Asylum (established in 1821 in New York) and the Hartford Retreat (established in 1824 in Connecticut)mdashall modeled after the York Retreat and implementing moral treatment as the dominant therapy
56
bull It was not until modern times that religion and psychiatry began to part paths
bull This separation was encouraged by the psychiatrist Sigmund Freud
57
bull After being ldquointroducedrdquo to the neurotic and hysterical aspects of religion by the famous French neurologist Jean Charcot in the mid-1880s
bull Freud began to emphasize this in a widely read series of publications from 1907 through his death in 1939
58
bull These writings left a legacy that would influence the practice of psychiatrymdashespecially psychotherapymdashfor the rest of the century
bull and lead to a true schism between religion and mental health care
59
bull That schism was illustrated in 1993 by a systematic review of the religious content of DSM-III-R which found nearly one-quarter of all cases of mental illness being described using religious illustrations [12]
60
bull The conflict has continued to the present day Consider recent e-letters in response to two articles published in The Psychiatristthinspabout this topic [13 14] and an even more recent debate about the role of prayer in psychiatric practice [15]
61
bull This conflict has manifested in the clinical work of many mental health professionals who have generally ignored the religious resources of patients or viewed them as pathological
62
bull Consider that a recent national survey of US psychiatrists found that 56 said they never rarely or only sometimes inquire about religiousspiritual issues in patients with depression or anxiety [16]
63
![Page 31: Religion, Spirituality, and Health · Review Article •Religion, Spirituality, and Health: • The Research and Clinical Implications • - Koenig, Harold G. "Religion, spirituality,](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022062605/5fcb0bcd7925581572559072/html5/thumbnails/31.jpg)
31
سر تیترها
فهرست مطالب بطور کاملتر شامل موارد ذیل می باشندbull
32
4 Religion Spirituality and Mental Health
bull 41 Coping with Adversity
bull 42 Positive Emotions
bull 421 Well-BeingHappiness
bull 422 Hope
bull 423 Optimism
bull 424 Meaning and Purpose
bull 425 Self-Esteem
bull 426 Sense of Control
bull 427 Positive Character Traits 33
and negative outcomes
bull 43 Depression
bull 44 Suicide
bull 45 Anxiety
bull 46 Psychotic DisorderSchizophrenia
bull 47 Bipolar Disorder
bull 48 Personality Traits
bull 49 Substance Abuse
bull 410 Social Problems
bull 4101 DelinquencyCrime
bull 4102 Marital Instability
bull 4103 Social Support
bull 4104 Social Capitalسرمایه اجتماعی
34
bull 5 Explaining the Relationship RS and Mental Health
35
6 Religion Spirituality and Health Behaviors
bull 61 Cigarette Smoking
bull 62 Exercise
bull 63 Diet
bull 64 Weight
bull 65 Sexual Behavior
36
7 Religion Spirituality and Physical Health
bull 71 Coronary Heart Disease (CHD) bull 72 Hypertension bull 73 Cerebrovascular Disease bull 74 Alzheimerrsquos Disease and Dementia bull 75 Immune Function bull 76 Endocrine Function bull 77 Cancer bull 78 Physical Functioning bull 79 Self-Rated Health مراقبتی خود
bull 710 Pain and Somatic Symptoms bull 711 Mortality
37
8 Explaining the Relationship RS and Physical Health
bull 81 Psychological
bull 82 Social
bull 83 Health Behaviors
bull 84 Other Pathways
38
9 Clinical Implications
bull 91 Rationale for Integrating Spirituality
bull 92 How to Integrate Spirituality into Patient Care
bull 10 Conclusions
39
bull Conflict of Interests
bull Acknowledgment
bull References 601
40
bull The support to write this paper was provided in part by the John Templeton Foundation
41
bull - Koenig Harold G Religion spirituality and health The research and clinical implications
International Scholarly Research Notices 2012 (2012) اعالمیه های بین المللی تحقیقات علمی
42
Review Article bull Religion Spirituality and Health The
Research and Clinical Implications
bull - Koenig Harold G Religion spirituality and health The research and clinical implications International
Scholarly Research Notices 2012 (2012) اعالمیه های بین المللی تحقیقات علمی
43
1 Historical Background and Introduction
bull Religion medicine and healthcare have been related in one way or another in all population groups since the beginning of recorded history
44
bull Only in recent times have these systems of healing been separated
bull and this separation has occurred largely in highly developed nations
bull in many developing countries there is little or no such separation
45
bull The history of religion medicine and healthcare in developed countries of the West though is a fascinating one
bull The first hospitals in the West for the care of the sick in the general population were built by religious organizations and staffed by religious orders
46
bull Throughout the Middle Ages and up through the French Revolution physicians were often clergy
bull For hundreds of years in fact religious institutions were responsible for licensing physicians to practice medicine
bull In the American colonies in particular many of the clergy were also physiciansmdashoften as a second job that helped to supplement their meager income from church work
47
bull Care for those with mental health problems in the West also had its roots within monasteries and religious communities [2]
bull In 1247 the Priory of St Mary of Bethlehem was built in London on the Thames River [3]
48
bull Originally designed to house ldquodistracted peoplerdquo this was Europersquos (and perhaps the worldrsquos) first mental hospital
bull In 1547 however St Maryrsquos was torn down and replaced by Bethlehem or Bethlem Hospital [4]
49
bull Over the years as secular authorities took control over the institution the hospital became famous for its inhumane treatment of the mentally ill who were often chained [5]thinspdunked in water or beaten as necessary to control them
bull In later years an admission fee (2 pence) was charged to the general public to observe the patients abusing themselves or other patients [4]
50
bull The hospital eventually became known as ldquobedlamrdquo (from which comes the word used today to indicate a state of confusion and disarray)
51
bull In response to the abuses in mental hospitals and precipitated by the death of a Quaker patient in New York asylum in England an English merchant and devout Quaker named William Tuke began to promote a new form of treatment of the mentally ill called ldquomoral treatmentrdquo
52
bull In 1796 he and the Quaker community in England established their own asylum known as the York Retreat [6]
53
bull Not long after this the Quakers brought moral treatment to America where it became the dominant form of psychiatric care in that country [6]
54
bull Established in Philadelphia by the Quakers in 1813 ldquoFriends Hospitalrdquo (or Friends Asylum) became the first private institution in the United States dedicated solely to the care of those with mental illness [7]
55
bull Psychiatric hospitals that followed in the footsteps of Friends Asylum were the McLean Hospital (established in 1818 in Boston and now associated with Harvard) the Bloomingdale Asylum (established in 1821 in New York) and the Hartford Retreat (established in 1824 in Connecticut)mdashall modeled after the York Retreat and implementing moral treatment as the dominant therapy
56
bull It was not until modern times that religion and psychiatry began to part paths
bull This separation was encouraged by the psychiatrist Sigmund Freud
57
bull After being ldquointroducedrdquo to the neurotic and hysterical aspects of religion by the famous French neurologist Jean Charcot in the mid-1880s
bull Freud began to emphasize this in a widely read series of publications from 1907 through his death in 1939
58
bull These writings left a legacy that would influence the practice of psychiatrymdashespecially psychotherapymdashfor the rest of the century
bull and lead to a true schism between religion and mental health care
59
bull That schism was illustrated in 1993 by a systematic review of the religious content of DSM-III-R which found nearly one-quarter of all cases of mental illness being described using religious illustrations [12]
60
bull The conflict has continued to the present day Consider recent e-letters in response to two articles published in The Psychiatristthinspabout this topic [13 14] and an even more recent debate about the role of prayer in psychiatric practice [15]
61
bull This conflict has manifested in the clinical work of many mental health professionals who have generally ignored the religious resources of patients or viewed them as pathological
62
bull Consider that a recent national survey of US psychiatrists found that 56 said they never rarely or only sometimes inquire about religiousspiritual issues in patients with depression or anxiety [16]
63
![Page 32: Religion, Spirituality, and Health · Review Article •Religion, Spirituality, and Health: • The Research and Clinical Implications • - Koenig, Harold G. "Religion, spirituality,](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022062605/5fcb0bcd7925581572559072/html5/thumbnails/32.jpg)
سر تیترها
فهرست مطالب بطور کاملتر شامل موارد ذیل می باشندbull
32
4 Religion Spirituality and Mental Health
bull 41 Coping with Adversity
bull 42 Positive Emotions
bull 421 Well-BeingHappiness
bull 422 Hope
bull 423 Optimism
bull 424 Meaning and Purpose
bull 425 Self-Esteem
bull 426 Sense of Control
bull 427 Positive Character Traits 33
and negative outcomes
bull 43 Depression
bull 44 Suicide
bull 45 Anxiety
bull 46 Psychotic DisorderSchizophrenia
bull 47 Bipolar Disorder
bull 48 Personality Traits
bull 49 Substance Abuse
bull 410 Social Problems
bull 4101 DelinquencyCrime
bull 4102 Marital Instability
bull 4103 Social Support
bull 4104 Social Capitalسرمایه اجتماعی
34
bull 5 Explaining the Relationship RS and Mental Health
35
6 Religion Spirituality and Health Behaviors
bull 61 Cigarette Smoking
bull 62 Exercise
bull 63 Diet
bull 64 Weight
bull 65 Sexual Behavior
36
7 Religion Spirituality and Physical Health
bull 71 Coronary Heart Disease (CHD) bull 72 Hypertension bull 73 Cerebrovascular Disease bull 74 Alzheimerrsquos Disease and Dementia bull 75 Immune Function bull 76 Endocrine Function bull 77 Cancer bull 78 Physical Functioning bull 79 Self-Rated Health مراقبتی خود
bull 710 Pain and Somatic Symptoms bull 711 Mortality
37
8 Explaining the Relationship RS and Physical Health
bull 81 Psychological
bull 82 Social
bull 83 Health Behaviors
bull 84 Other Pathways
38
9 Clinical Implications
bull 91 Rationale for Integrating Spirituality
bull 92 How to Integrate Spirituality into Patient Care
bull 10 Conclusions
39
bull Conflict of Interests
bull Acknowledgment
bull References 601
40
bull The support to write this paper was provided in part by the John Templeton Foundation
41
bull - Koenig Harold G Religion spirituality and health The research and clinical implications
International Scholarly Research Notices 2012 (2012) اعالمیه های بین المللی تحقیقات علمی
42
Review Article bull Religion Spirituality and Health The
Research and Clinical Implications
bull - Koenig Harold G Religion spirituality and health The research and clinical implications International
Scholarly Research Notices 2012 (2012) اعالمیه های بین المللی تحقیقات علمی
43
1 Historical Background and Introduction
bull Religion medicine and healthcare have been related in one way or another in all population groups since the beginning of recorded history
44
bull Only in recent times have these systems of healing been separated
bull and this separation has occurred largely in highly developed nations
bull in many developing countries there is little or no such separation
45
bull The history of religion medicine and healthcare in developed countries of the West though is a fascinating one
bull The first hospitals in the West for the care of the sick in the general population were built by religious organizations and staffed by religious orders
46
bull Throughout the Middle Ages and up through the French Revolution physicians were often clergy
bull For hundreds of years in fact religious institutions were responsible for licensing physicians to practice medicine
bull In the American colonies in particular many of the clergy were also physiciansmdashoften as a second job that helped to supplement their meager income from church work
47
bull Care for those with mental health problems in the West also had its roots within monasteries and religious communities [2]
bull In 1247 the Priory of St Mary of Bethlehem was built in London on the Thames River [3]
48
bull Originally designed to house ldquodistracted peoplerdquo this was Europersquos (and perhaps the worldrsquos) first mental hospital
bull In 1547 however St Maryrsquos was torn down and replaced by Bethlehem or Bethlem Hospital [4]
49
bull Over the years as secular authorities took control over the institution the hospital became famous for its inhumane treatment of the mentally ill who were often chained [5]thinspdunked in water or beaten as necessary to control them
bull In later years an admission fee (2 pence) was charged to the general public to observe the patients abusing themselves or other patients [4]
50
bull The hospital eventually became known as ldquobedlamrdquo (from which comes the word used today to indicate a state of confusion and disarray)
51
bull In response to the abuses in mental hospitals and precipitated by the death of a Quaker patient in New York asylum in England an English merchant and devout Quaker named William Tuke began to promote a new form of treatment of the mentally ill called ldquomoral treatmentrdquo
52
bull In 1796 he and the Quaker community in England established their own asylum known as the York Retreat [6]
53
bull Not long after this the Quakers brought moral treatment to America where it became the dominant form of psychiatric care in that country [6]
54
bull Established in Philadelphia by the Quakers in 1813 ldquoFriends Hospitalrdquo (or Friends Asylum) became the first private institution in the United States dedicated solely to the care of those with mental illness [7]
55
bull Psychiatric hospitals that followed in the footsteps of Friends Asylum were the McLean Hospital (established in 1818 in Boston and now associated with Harvard) the Bloomingdale Asylum (established in 1821 in New York) and the Hartford Retreat (established in 1824 in Connecticut)mdashall modeled after the York Retreat and implementing moral treatment as the dominant therapy
56
bull It was not until modern times that religion and psychiatry began to part paths
bull This separation was encouraged by the psychiatrist Sigmund Freud
57
bull After being ldquointroducedrdquo to the neurotic and hysterical aspects of religion by the famous French neurologist Jean Charcot in the mid-1880s
bull Freud began to emphasize this in a widely read series of publications from 1907 through his death in 1939
58
bull These writings left a legacy that would influence the practice of psychiatrymdashespecially psychotherapymdashfor the rest of the century
bull and lead to a true schism between religion and mental health care
59
bull That schism was illustrated in 1993 by a systematic review of the religious content of DSM-III-R which found nearly one-quarter of all cases of mental illness being described using religious illustrations [12]
60
bull The conflict has continued to the present day Consider recent e-letters in response to two articles published in The Psychiatristthinspabout this topic [13 14] and an even more recent debate about the role of prayer in psychiatric practice [15]
61
bull This conflict has manifested in the clinical work of many mental health professionals who have generally ignored the religious resources of patients or viewed them as pathological
62
bull Consider that a recent national survey of US psychiatrists found that 56 said they never rarely or only sometimes inquire about religiousspiritual issues in patients with depression or anxiety [16]
63
![Page 33: Religion, Spirituality, and Health · Review Article •Religion, Spirituality, and Health: • The Research and Clinical Implications • - Koenig, Harold G. "Religion, spirituality,](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022062605/5fcb0bcd7925581572559072/html5/thumbnails/33.jpg)
4 Religion Spirituality and Mental Health
bull 41 Coping with Adversity
bull 42 Positive Emotions
bull 421 Well-BeingHappiness
bull 422 Hope
bull 423 Optimism
bull 424 Meaning and Purpose
bull 425 Self-Esteem
bull 426 Sense of Control
bull 427 Positive Character Traits 33
and negative outcomes
bull 43 Depression
bull 44 Suicide
bull 45 Anxiety
bull 46 Psychotic DisorderSchizophrenia
bull 47 Bipolar Disorder
bull 48 Personality Traits
bull 49 Substance Abuse
bull 410 Social Problems
bull 4101 DelinquencyCrime
bull 4102 Marital Instability
bull 4103 Social Support
bull 4104 Social Capitalسرمایه اجتماعی
34
bull 5 Explaining the Relationship RS and Mental Health
35
6 Religion Spirituality and Health Behaviors
bull 61 Cigarette Smoking
bull 62 Exercise
bull 63 Diet
bull 64 Weight
bull 65 Sexual Behavior
36
7 Religion Spirituality and Physical Health
bull 71 Coronary Heart Disease (CHD) bull 72 Hypertension bull 73 Cerebrovascular Disease bull 74 Alzheimerrsquos Disease and Dementia bull 75 Immune Function bull 76 Endocrine Function bull 77 Cancer bull 78 Physical Functioning bull 79 Self-Rated Health مراقبتی خود
bull 710 Pain and Somatic Symptoms bull 711 Mortality
37
8 Explaining the Relationship RS and Physical Health
bull 81 Psychological
bull 82 Social
bull 83 Health Behaviors
bull 84 Other Pathways
38
9 Clinical Implications
bull 91 Rationale for Integrating Spirituality
bull 92 How to Integrate Spirituality into Patient Care
bull 10 Conclusions
39
bull Conflict of Interests
bull Acknowledgment
bull References 601
40
bull The support to write this paper was provided in part by the John Templeton Foundation
41
bull - Koenig Harold G Religion spirituality and health The research and clinical implications
International Scholarly Research Notices 2012 (2012) اعالمیه های بین المللی تحقیقات علمی
42
Review Article bull Religion Spirituality and Health The
Research and Clinical Implications
bull - Koenig Harold G Religion spirituality and health The research and clinical implications International
Scholarly Research Notices 2012 (2012) اعالمیه های بین المللی تحقیقات علمی
43
1 Historical Background and Introduction
bull Religion medicine and healthcare have been related in one way or another in all population groups since the beginning of recorded history
44
bull Only in recent times have these systems of healing been separated
bull and this separation has occurred largely in highly developed nations
bull in many developing countries there is little or no such separation
45
bull The history of religion medicine and healthcare in developed countries of the West though is a fascinating one
bull The first hospitals in the West for the care of the sick in the general population were built by religious organizations and staffed by religious orders
46
bull Throughout the Middle Ages and up through the French Revolution physicians were often clergy
bull For hundreds of years in fact religious institutions were responsible for licensing physicians to practice medicine
bull In the American colonies in particular many of the clergy were also physiciansmdashoften as a second job that helped to supplement their meager income from church work
47
bull Care for those with mental health problems in the West also had its roots within monasteries and religious communities [2]
bull In 1247 the Priory of St Mary of Bethlehem was built in London on the Thames River [3]
48
bull Originally designed to house ldquodistracted peoplerdquo this was Europersquos (and perhaps the worldrsquos) first mental hospital
bull In 1547 however St Maryrsquos was torn down and replaced by Bethlehem or Bethlem Hospital [4]
49
bull Over the years as secular authorities took control over the institution the hospital became famous for its inhumane treatment of the mentally ill who were often chained [5]thinspdunked in water or beaten as necessary to control them
bull In later years an admission fee (2 pence) was charged to the general public to observe the patients abusing themselves or other patients [4]
50
bull The hospital eventually became known as ldquobedlamrdquo (from which comes the word used today to indicate a state of confusion and disarray)
51
bull In response to the abuses in mental hospitals and precipitated by the death of a Quaker patient in New York asylum in England an English merchant and devout Quaker named William Tuke began to promote a new form of treatment of the mentally ill called ldquomoral treatmentrdquo
52
bull In 1796 he and the Quaker community in England established their own asylum known as the York Retreat [6]
53
bull Not long after this the Quakers brought moral treatment to America where it became the dominant form of psychiatric care in that country [6]
54
bull Established in Philadelphia by the Quakers in 1813 ldquoFriends Hospitalrdquo (or Friends Asylum) became the first private institution in the United States dedicated solely to the care of those with mental illness [7]
55
bull Psychiatric hospitals that followed in the footsteps of Friends Asylum were the McLean Hospital (established in 1818 in Boston and now associated with Harvard) the Bloomingdale Asylum (established in 1821 in New York) and the Hartford Retreat (established in 1824 in Connecticut)mdashall modeled after the York Retreat and implementing moral treatment as the dominant therapy
56
bull It was not until modern times that religion and psychiatry began to part paths
bull This separation was encouraged by the psychiatrist Sigmund Freud
57
bull After being ldquointroducedrdquo to the neurotic and hysterical aspects of religion by the famous French neurologist Jean Charcot in the mid-1880s
bull Freud began to emphasize this in a widely read series of publications from 1907 through his death in 1939
58
bull These writings left a legacy that would influence the practice of psychiatrymdashespecially psychotherapymdashfor the rest of the century
bull and lead to a true schism between religion and mental health care
59
bull That schism was illustrated in 1993 by a systematic review of the religious content of DSM-III-R which found nearly one-quarter of all cases of mental illness being described using religious illustrations [12]
60
bull The conflict has continued to the present day Consider recent e-letters in response to two articles published in The Psychiatristthinspabout this topic [13 14] and an even more recent debate about the role of prayer in psychiatric practice [15]
61
bull This conflict has manifested in the clinical work of many mental health professionals who have generally ignored the religious resources of patients or viewed them as pathological
62
bull Consider that a recent national survey of US psychiatrists found that 56 said they never rarely or only sometimes inquire about religiousspiritual issues in patients with depression or anxiety [16]
63
![Page 34: Religion, Spirituality, and Health · Review Article •Religion, Spirituality, and Health: • The Research and Clinical Implications • - Koenig, Harold G. "Religion, spirituality,](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022062605/5fcb0bcd7925581572559072/html5/thumbnails/34.jpg)
and negative outcomes
bull 43 Depression
bull 44 Suicide
bull 45 Anxiety
bull 46 Psychotic DisorderSchizophrenia
bull 47 Bipolar Disorder
bull 48 Personality Traits
bull 49 Substance Abuse
bull 410 Social Problems
bull 4101 DelinquencyCrime
bull 4102 Marital Instability
bull 4103 Social Support
bull 4104 Social Capitalسرمایه اجتماعی
34
bull 5 Explaining the Relationship RS and Mental Health
35
6 Religion Spirituality and Health Behaviors
bull 61 Cigarette Smoking
bull 62 Exercise
bull 63 Diet
bull 64 Weight
bull 65 Sexual Behavior
36
7 Religion Spirituality and Physical Health
bull 71 Coronary Heart Disease (CHD) bull 72 Hypertension bull 73 Cerebrovascular Disease bull 74 Alzheimerrsquos Disease and Dementia bull 75 Immune Function bull 76 Endocrine Function bull 77 Cancer bull 78 Physical Functioning bull 79 Self-Rated Health مراقبتی خود
bull 710 Pain and Somatic Symptoms bull 711 Mortality
37
8 Explaining the Relationship RS and Physical Health
bull 81 Psychological
bull 82 Social
bull 83 Health Behaviors
bull 84 Other Pathways
38
9 Clinical Implications
bull 91 Rationale for Integrating Spirituality
bull 92 How to Integrate Spirituality into Patient Care
bull 10 Conclusions
39
bull Conflict of Interests
bull Acknowledgment
bull References 601
40
bull The support to write this paper was provided in part by the John Templeton Foundation
41
bull - Koenig Harold G Religion spirituality and health The research and clinical implications
International Scholarly Research Notices 2012 (2012) اعالمیه های بین المللی تحقیقات علمی
42
Review Article bull Religion Spirituality and Health The
Research and Clinical Implications
bull - Koenig Harold G Religion spirituality and health The research and clinical implications International
Scholarly Research Notices 2012 (2012) اعالمیه های بین المللی تحقیقات علمی
43
1 Historical Background and Introduction
bull Religion medicine and healthcare have been related in one way or another in all population groups since the beginning of recorded history
44
bull Only in recent times have these systems of healing been separated
bull and this separation has occurred largely in highly developed nations
bull in many developing countries there is little or no such separation
45
bull The history of religion medicine and healthcare in developed countries of the West though is a fascinating one
bull The first hospitals in the West for the care of the sick in the general population were built by religious organizations and staffed by religious orders
46
bull Throughout the Middle Ages and up through the French Revolution physicians were often clergy
bull For hundreds of years in fact religious institutions were responsible for licensing physicians to practice medicine
bull In the American colonies in particular many of the clergy were also physiciansmdashoften as a second job that helped to supplement their meager income from church work
47
bull Care for those with mental health problems in the West also had its roots within monasteries and religious communities [2]
bull In 1247 the Priory of St Mary of Bethlehem was built in London on the Thames River [3]
48
bull Originally designed to house ldquodistracted peoplerdquo this was Europersquos (and perhaps the worldrsquos) first mental hospital
bull In 1547 however St Maryrsquos was torn down and replaced by Bethlehem or Bethlem Hospital [4]
49
bull Over the years as secular authorities took control over the institution the hospital became famous for its inhumane treatment of the mentally ill who were often chained [5]thinspdunked in water or beaten as necessary to control them
bull In later years an admission fee (2 pence) was charged to the general public to observe the patients abusing themselves or other patients [4]
50
bull The hospital eventually became known as ldquobedlamrdquo (from which comes the word used today to indicate a state of confusion and disarray)
51
bull In response to the abuses in mental hospitals and precipitated by the death of a Quaker patient in New York asylum in England an English merchant and devout Quaker named William Tuke began to promote a new form of treatment of the mentally ill called ldquomoral treatmentrdquo
52
bull In 1796 he and the Quaker community in England established their own asylum known as the York Retreat [6]
53
bull Not long after this the Quakers brought moral treatment to America where it became the dominant form of psychiatric care in that country [6]
54
bull Established in Philadelphia by the Quakers in 1813 ldquoFriends Hospitalrdquo (or Friends Asylum) became the first private institution in the United States dedicated solely to the care of those with mental illness [7]
55
bull Psychiatric hospitals that followed in the footsteps of Friends Asylum were the McLean Hospital (established in 1818 in Boston and now associated with Harvard) the Bloomingdale Asylum (established in 1821 in New York) and the Hartford Retreat (established in 1824 in Connecticut)mdashall modeled after the York Retreat and implementing moral treatment as the dominant therapy
56
bull It was not until modern times that religion and psychiatry began to part paths
bull This separation was encouraged by the psychiatrist Sigmund Freud
57
bull After being ldquointroducedrdquo to the neurotic and hysterical aspects of religion by the famous French neurologist Jean Charcot in the mid-1880s
bull Freud began to emphasize this in a widely read series of publications from 1907 through his death in 1939
58
bull These writings left a legacy that would influence the practice of psychiatrymdashespecially psychotherapymdashfor the rest of the century
bull and lead to a true schism between religion and mental health care
59
bull That schism was illustrated in 1993 by a systematic review of the religious content of DSM-III-R which found nearly one-quarter of all cases of mental illness being described using religious illustrations [12]
60
bull The conflict has continued to the present day Consider recent e-letters in response to two articles published in The Psychiatristthinspabout this topic [13 14] and an even more recent debate about the role of prayer in psychiatric practice [15]
61
bull This conflict has manifested in the clinical work of many mental health professionals who have generally ignored the religious resources of patients or viewed them as pathological
62
bull Consider that a recent national survey of US psychiatrists found that 56 said they never rarely or only sometimes inquire about religiousspiritual issues in patients with depression or anxiety [16]
63
![Page 35: Religion, Spirituality, and Health · Review Article •Religion, Spirituality, and Health: • The Research and Clinical Implications • - Koenig, Harold G. "Religion, spirituality,](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022062605/5fcb0bcd7925581572559072/html5/thumbnails/35.jpg)
bull 5 Explaining the Relationship RS and Mental Health
35
6 Religion Spirituality and Health Behaviors
bull 61 Cigarette Smoking
bull 62 Exercise
bull 63 Diet
bull 64 Weight
bull 65 Sexual Behavior
36
7 Religion Spirituality and Physical Health
bull 71 Coronary Heart Disease (CHD) bull 72 Hypertension bull 73 Cerebrovascular Disease bull 74 Alzheimerrsquos Disease and Dementia bull 75 Immune Function bull 76 Endocrine Function bull 77 Cancer bull 78 Physical Functioning bull 79 Self-Rated Health مراقبتی خود
bull 710 Pain and Somatic Symptoms bull 711 Mortality
37
8 Explaining the Relationship RS and Physical Health
bull 81 Psychological
bull 82 Social
bull 83 Health Behaviors
bull 84 Other Pathways
38
9 Clinical Implications
bull 91 Rationale for Integrating Spirituality
bull 92 How to Integrate Spirituality into Patient Care
bull 10 Conclusions
39
bull Conflict of Interests
bull Acknowledgment
bull References 601
40
bull The support to write this paper was provided in part by the John Templeton Foundation
41
bull - Koenig Harold G Religion spirituality and health The research and clinical implications
International Scholarly Research Notices 2012 (2012) اعالمیه های بین المللی تحقیقات علمی
42
Review Article bull Religion Spirituality and Health The
Research and Clinical Implications
bull - Koenig Harold G Religion spirituality and health The research and clinical implications International
Scholarly Research Notices 2012 (2012) اعالمیه های بین المللی تحقیقات علمی
43
1 Historical Background and Introduction
bull Religion medicine and healthcare have been related in one way or another in all population groups since the beginning of recorded history
44
bull Only in recent times have these systems of healing been separated
bull and this separation has occurred largely in highly developed nations
bull in many developing countries there is little or no such separation
45
bull The history of religion medicine and healthcare in developed countries of the West though is a fascinating one
bull The first hospitals in the West for the care of the sick in the general population were built by religious organizations and staffed by religious orders
46
bull Throughout the Middle Ages and up through the French Revolution physicians were often clergy
bull For hundreds of years in fact religious institutions were responsible for licensing physicians to practice medicine
bull In the American colonies in particular many of the clergy were also physiciansmdashoften as a second job that helped to supplement their meager income from church work
47
bull Care for those with mental health problems in the West also had its roots within monasteries and religious communities [2]
bull In 1247 the Priory of St Mary of Bethlehem was built in London on the Thames River [3]
48
bull Originally designed to house ldquodistracted peoplerdquo this was Europersquos (and perhaps the worldrsquos) first mental hospital
bull In 1547 however St Maryrsquos was torn down and replaced by Bethlehem or Bethlem Hospital [4]
49
bull Over the years as secular authorities took control over the institution the hospital became famous for its inhumane treatment of the mentally ill who were often chained [5]thinspdunked in water or beaten as necessary to control them
bull In later years an admission fee (2 pence) was charged to the general public to observe the patients abusing themselves or other patients [4]
50
bull The hospital eventually became known as ldquobedlamrdquo (from which comes the word used today to indicate a state of confusion and disarray)
51
bull In response to the abuses in mental hospitals and precipitated by the death of a Quaker patient in New York asylum in England an English merchant and devout Quaker named William Tuke began to promote a new form of treatment of the mentally ill called ldquomoral treatmentrdquo
52
bull In 1796 he and the Quaker community in England established their own asylum known as the York Retreat [6]
53
bull Not long after this the Quakers brought moral treatment to America where it became the dominant form of psychiatric care in that country [6]
54
bull Established in Philadelphia by the Quakers in 1813 ldquoFriends Hospitalrdquo (or Friends Asylum) became the first private institution in the United States dedicated solely to the care of those with mental illness [7]
55
bull Psychiatric hospitals that followed in the footsteps of Friends Asylum were the McLean Hospital (established in 1818 in Boston and now associated with Harvard) the Bloomingdale Asylum (established in 1821 in New York) and the Hartford Retreat (established in 1824 in Connecticut)mdashall modeled after the York Retreat and implementing moral treatment as the dominant therapy
56
bull It was not until modern times that religion and psychiatry began to part paths
bull This separation was encouraged by the psychiatrist Sigmund Freud
57
bull After being ldquointroducedrdquo to the neurotic and hysterical aspects of religion by the famous French neurologist Jean Charcot in the mid-1880s
bull Freud began to emphasize this in a widely read series of publications from 1907 through his death in 1939
58
bull These writings left a legacy that would influence the practice of psychiatrymdashespecially psychotherapymdashfor the rest of the century
bull and lead to a true schism between religion and mental health care
59
bull That schism was illustrated in 1993 by a systematic review of the religious content of DSM-III-R which found nearly one-quarter of all cases of mental illness being described using religious illustrations [12]
60
bull The conflict has continued to the present day Consider recent e-letters in response to two articles published in The Psychiatristthinspabout this topic [13 14] and an even more recent debate about the role of prayer in psychiatric practice [15]
61
bull This conflict has manifested in the clinical work of many mental health professionals who have generally ignored the religious resources of patients or viewed them as pathological
62
bull Consider that a recent national survey of US psychiatrists found that 56 said they never rarely or only sometimes inquire about religiousspiritual issues in patients with depression or anxiety [16]
63
![Page 36: Religion, Spirituality, and Health · Review Article •Religion, Spirituality, and Health: • The Research and Clinical Implications • - Koenig, Harold G. "Religion, spirituality,](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022062605/5fcb0bcd7925581572559072/html5/thumbnails/36.jpg)
6 Religion Spirituality and Health Behaviors
bull 61 Cigarette Smoking
bull 62 Exercise
bull 63 Diet
bull 64 Weight
bull 65 Sexual Behavior
36
7 Religion Spirituality and Physical Health
bull 71 Coronary Heart Disease (CHD) bull 72 Hypertension bull 73 Cerebrovascular Disease bull 74 Alzheimerrsquos Disease and Dementia bull 75 Immune Function bull 76 Endocrine Function bull 77 Cancer bull 78 Physical Functioning bull 79 Self-Rated Health مراقبتی خود
bull 710 Pain and Somatic Symptoms bull 711 Mortality
37
8 Explaining the Relationship RS and Physical Health
bull 81 Psychological
bull 82 Social
bull 83 Health Behaviors
bull 84 Other Pathways
38
9 Clinical Implications
bull 91 Rationale for Integrating Spirituality
bull 92 How to Integrate Spirituality into Patient Care
bull 10 Conclusions
39
bull Conflict of Interests
bull Acknowledgment
bull References 601
40
bull The support to write this paper was provided in part by the John Templeton Foundation
41
bull - Koenig Harold G Religion spirituality and health The research and clinical implications
International Scholarly Research Notices 2012 (2012) اعالمیه های بین المللی تحقیقات علمی
42
Review Article bull Religion Spirituality and Health The
Research and Clinical Implications
bull - Koenig Harold G Religion spirituality and health The research and clinical implications International
Scholarly Research Notices 2012 (2012) اعالمیه های بین المللی تحقیقات علمی
43
1 Historical Background and Introduction
bull Religion medicine and healthcare have been related in one way or another in all population groups since the beginning of recorded history
44
bull Only in recent times have these systems of healing been separated
bull and this separation has occurred largely in highly developed nations
bull in many developing countries there is little or no such separation
45
bull The history of religion medicine and healthcare in developed countries of the West though is a fascinating one
bull The first hospitals in the West for the care of the sick in the general population were built by religious organizations and staffed by religious orders
46
bull Throughout the Middle Ages and up through the French Revolution physicians were often clergy
bull For hundreds of years in fact religious institutions were responsible for licensing physicians to practice medicine
bull In the American colonies in particular many of the clergy were also physiciansmdashoften as a second job that helped to supplement their meager income from church work
47
bull Care for those with mental health problems in the West also had its roots within monasteries and religious communities [2]
bull In 1247 the Priory of St Mary of Bethlehem was built in London on the Thames River [3]
48
bull Originally designed to house ldquodistracted peoplerdquo this was Europersquos (and perhaps the worldrsquos) first mental hospital
bull In 1547 however St Maryrsquos was torn down and replaced by Bethlehem or Bethlem Hospital [4]
49
bull Over the years as secular authorities took control over the institution the hospital became famous for its inhumane treatment of the mentally ill who were often chained [5]thinspdunked in water or beaten as necessary to control them
bull In later years an admission fee (2 pence) was charged to the general public to observe the patients abusing themselves or other patients [4]
50
bull The hospital eventually became known as ldquobedlamrdquo (from which comes the word used today to indicate a state of confusion and disarray)
51
bull In response to the abuses in mental hospitals and precipitated by the death of a Quaker patient in New York asylum in England an English merchant and devout Quaker named William Tuke began to promote a new form of treatment of the mentally ill called ldquomoral treatmentrdquo
52
bull In 1796 he and the Quaker community in England established their own asylum known as the York Retreat [6]
53
bull Not long after this the Quakers brought moral treatment to America where it became the dominant form of psychiatric care in that country [6]
54
bull Established in Philadelphia by the Quakers in 1813 ldquoFriends Hospitalrdquo (or Friends Asylum) became the first private institution in the United States dedicated solely to the care of those with mental illness [7]
55
bull Psychiatric hospitals that followed in the footsteps of Friends Asylum were the McLean Hospital (established in 1818 in Boston and now associated with Harvard) the Bloomingdale Asylum (established in 1821 in New York) and the Hartford Retreat (established in 1824 in Connecticut)mdashall modeled after the York Retreat and implementing moral treatment as the dominant therapy
56
bull It was not until modern times that religion and psychiatry began to part paths
bull This separation was encouraged by the psychiatrist Sigmund Freud
57
bull After being ldquointroducedrdquo to the neurotic and hysterical aspects of religion by the famous French neurologist Jean Charcot in the mid-1880s
bull Freud began to emphasize this in a widely read series of publications from 1907 through his death in 1939
58
bull These writings left a legacy that would influence the practice of psychiatrymdashespecially psychotherapymdashfor the rest of the century
bull and lead to a true schism between religion and mental health care
59
bull That schism was illustrated in 1993 by a systematic review of the religious content of DSM-III-R which found nearly one-quarter of all cases of mental illness being described using religious illustrations [12]
60
bull The conflict has continued to the present day Consider recent e-letters in response to two articles published in The Psychiatristthinspabout this topic [13 14] and an even more recent debate about the role of prayer in psychiatric practice [15]
61
bull This conflict has manifested in the clinical work of many mental health professionals who have generally ignored the religious resources of patients or viewed them as pathological
62
bull Consider that a recent national survey of US psychiatrists found that 56 said they never rarely or only sometimes inquire about religiousspiritual issues in patients with depression or anxiety [16]
63
![Page 37: Religion, Spirituality, and Health · Review Article •Religion, Spirituality, and Health: • The Research and Clinical Implications • - Koenig, Harold G. "Religion, spirituality,](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022062605/5fcb0bcd7925581572559072/html5/thumbnails/37.jpg)
7 Religion Spirituality and Physical Health
bull 71 Coronary Heart Disease (CHD) bull 72 Hypertension bull 73 Cerebrovascular Disease bull 74 Alzheimerrsquos Disease and Dementia bull 75 Immune Function bull 76 Endocrine Function bull 77 Cancer bull 78 Physical Functioning bull 79 Self-Rated Health مراقبتی خود
bull 710 Pain and Somatic Symptoms bull 711 Mortality
37
8 Explaining the Relationship RS and Physical Health
bull 81 Psychological
bull 82 Social
bull 83 Health Behaviors
bull 84 Other Pathways
38
9 Clinical Implications
bull 91 Rationale for Integrating Spirituality
bull 92 How to Integrate Spirituality into Patient Care
bull 10 Conclusions
39
bull Conflict of Interests
bull Acknowledgment
bull References 601
40
bull The support to write this paper was provided in part by the John Templeton Foundation
41
bull - Koenig Harold G Religion spirituality and health The research and clinical implications
International Scholarly Research Notices 2012 (2012) اعالمیه های بین المللی تحقیقات علمی
42
Review Article bull Religion Spirituality and Health The
Research and Clinical Implications
bull - Koenig Harold G Religion spirituality and health The research and clinical implications International
Scholarly Research Notices 2012 (2012) اعالمیه های بین المللی تحقیقات علمی
43
1 Historical Background and Introduction
bull Religion medicine and healthcare have been related in one way or another in all population groups since the beginning of recorded history
44
bull Only in recent times have these systems of healing been separated
bull and this separation has occurred largely in highly developed nations
bull in many developing countries there is little or no such separation
45
bull The history of religion medicine and healthcare in developed countries of the West though is a fascinating one
bull The first hospitals in the West for the care of the sick in the general population were built by religious organizations and staffed by religious orders
46
bull Throughout the Middle Ages and up through the French Revolution physicians were often clergy
bull For hundreds of years in fact religious institutions were responsible for licensing physicians to practice medicine
bull In the American colonies in particular many of the clergy were also physiciansmdashoften as a second job that helped to supplement their meager income from church work
47
bull Care for those with mental health problems in the West also had its roots within monasteries and religious communities [2]
bull In 1247 the Priory of St Mary of Bethlehem was built in London on the Thames River [3]
48
bull Originally designed to house ldquodistracted peoplerdquo this was Europersquos (and perhaps the worldrsquos) first mental hospital
bull In 1547 however St Maryrsquos was torn down and replaced by Bethlehem or Bethlem Hospital [4]
49
bull Over the years as secular authorities took control over the institution the hospital became famous for its inhumane treatment of the mentally ill who were often chained [5]thinspdunked in water or beaten as necessary to control them
bull In later years an admission fee (2 pence) was charged to the general public to observe the patients abusing themselves or other patients [4]
50
bull The hospital eventually became known as ldquobedlamrdquo (from which comes the word used today to indicate a state of confusion and disarray)
51
bull In response to the abuses in mental hospitals and precipitated by the death of a Quaker patient in New York asylum in England an English merchant and devout Quaker named William Tuke began to promote a new form of treatment of the mentally ill called ldquomoral treatmentrdquo
52
bull In 1796 he and the Quaker community in England established their own asylum known as the York Retreat [6]
53
bull Not long after this the Quakers brought moral treatment to America where it became the dominant form of psychiatric care in that country [6]
54
bull Established in Philadelphia by the Quakers in 1813 ldquoFriends Hospitalrdquo (or Friends Asylum) became the first private institution in the United States dedicated solely to the care of those with mental illness [7]
55
bull Psychiatric hospitals that followed in the footsteps of Friends Asylum were the McLean Hospital (established in 1818 in Boston and now associated with Harvard) the Bloomingdale Asylum (established in 1821 in New York) and the Hartford Retreat (established in 1824 in Connecticut)mdashall modeled after the York Retreat and implementing moral treatment as the dominant therapy
56
bull It was not until modern times that religion and psychiatry began to part paths
bull This separation was encouraged by the psychiatrist Sigmund Freud
57
bull After being ldquointroducedrdquo to the neurotic and hysterical aspects of religion by the famous French neurologist Jean Charcot in the mid-1880s
bull Freud began to emphasize this in a widely read series of publications from 1907 through his death in 1939
58
bull These writings left a legacy that would influence the practice of psychiatrymdashespecially psychotherapymdashfor the rest of the century
bull and lead to a true schism between religion and mental health care
59
bull That schism was illustrated in 1993 by a systematic review of the religious content of DSM-III-R which found nearly one-quarter of all cases of mental illness being described using religious illustrations [12]
60
bull The conflict has continued to the present day Consider recent e-letters in response to two articles published in The Psychiatristthinspabout this topic [13 14] and an even more recent debate about the role of prayer in psychiatric practice [15]
61
bull This conflict has manifested in the clinical work of many mental health professionals who have generally ignored the religious resources of patients or viewed them as pathological
62
bull Consider that a recent national survey of US psychiatrists found that 56 said they never rarely or only sometimes inquire about religiousspiritual issues in patients with depression or anxiety [16]
63
![Page 38: Religion, Spirituality, and Health · Review Article •Religion, Spirituality, and Health: • The Research and Clinical Implications • - Koenig, Harold G. "Religion, spirituality,](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022062605/5fcb0bcd7925581572559072/html5/thumbnails/38.jpg)
8 Explaining the Relationship RS and Physical Health
bull 81 Psychological
bull 82 Social
bull 83 Health Behaviors
bull 84 Other Pathways
38
9 Clinical Implications
bull 91 Rationale for Integrating Spirituality
bull 92 How to Integrate Spirituality into Patient Care
bull 10 Conclusions
39
bull Conflict of Interests
bull Acknowledgment
bull References 601
40
bull The support to write this paper was provided in part by the John Templeton Foundation
41
bull - Koenig Harold G Religion spirituality and health The research and clinical implications
International Scholarly Research Notices 2012 (2012) اعالمیه های بین المللی تحقیقات علمی
42
Review Article bull Religion Spirituality and Health The
Research and Clinical Implications
bull - Koenig Harold G Religion spirituality and health The research and clinical implications International
Scholarly Research Notices 2012 (2012) اعالمیه های بین المللی تحقیقات علمی
43
1 Historical Background and Introduction
bull Religion medicine and healthcare have been related in one way or another in all population groups since the beginning of recorded history
44
bull Only in recent times have these systems of healing been separated
bull and this separation has occurred largely in highly developed nations
bull in many developing countries there is little or no such separation
45
bull The history of religion medicine and healthcare in developed countries of the West though is a fascinating one
bull The first hospitals in the West for the care of the sick in the general population were built by religious organizations and staffed by religious orders
46
bull Throughout the Middle Ages and up through the French Revolution physicians were often clergy
bull For hundreds of years in fact religious institutions were responsible for licensing physicians to practice medicine
bull In the American colonies in particular many of the clergy were also physiciansmdashoften as a second job that helped to supplement their meager income from church work
47
bull Care for those with mental health problems in the West also had its roots within monasteries and religious communities [2]
bull In 1247 the Priory of St Mary of Bethlehem was built in London on the Thames River [3]
48
bull Originally designed to house ldquodistracted peoplerdquo this was Europersquos (and perhaps the worldrsquos) first mental hospital
bull In 1547 however St Maryrsquos was torn down and replaced by Bethlehem or Bethlem Hospital [4]
49
bull Over the years as secular authorities took control over the institution the hospital became famous for its inhumane treatment of the mentally ill who were often chained [5]thinspdunked in water or beaten as necessary to control them
bull In later years an admission fee (2 pence) was charged to the general public to observe the patients abusing themselves or other patients [4]
50
bull The hospital eventually became known as ldquobedlamrdquo (from which comes the word used today to indicate a state of confusion and disarray)
51
bull In response to the abuses in mental hospitals and precipitated by the death of a Quaker patient in New York asylum in England an English merchant and devout Quaker named William Tuke began to promote a new form of treatment of the mentally ill called ldquomoral treatmentrdquo
52
bull In 1796 he and the Quaker community in England established their own asylum known as the York Retreat [6]
53
bull Not long after this the Quakers brought moral treatment to America where it became the dominant form of psychiatric care in that country [6]
54
bull Established in Philadelphia by the Quakers in 1813 ldquoFriends Hospitalrdquo (or Friends Asylum) became the first private institution in the United States dedicated solely to the care of those with mental illness [7]
55
bull Psychiatric hospitals that followed in the footsteps of Friends Asylum were the McLean Hospital (established in 1818 in Boston and now associated with Harvard) the Bloomingdale Asylum (established in 1821 in New York) and the Hartford Retreat (established in 1824 in Connecticut)mdashall modeled after the York Retreat and implementing moral treatment as the dominant therapy
56
bull It was not until modern times that religion and psychiatry began to part paths
bull This separation was encouraged by the psychiatrist Sigmund Freud
57
bull After being ldquointroducedrdquo to the neurotic and hysterical aspects of religion by the famous French neurologist Jean Charcot in the mid-1880s
bull Freud began to emphasize this in a widely read series of publications from 1907 through his death in 1939
58
bull These writings left a legacy that would influence the practice of psychiatrymdashespecially psychotherapymdashfor the rest of the century
bull and lead to a true schism between religion and mental health care
59
bull That schism was illustrated in 1993 by a systematic review of the religious content of DSM-III-R which found nearly one-quarter of all cases of mental illness being described using religious illustrations [12]
60
bull The conflict has continued to the present day Consider recent e-letters in response to two articles published in The Psychiatristthinspabout this topic [13 14] and an even more recent debate about the role of prayer in psychiatric practice [15]
61
bull This conflict has manifested in the clinical work of many mental health professionals who have generally ignored the religious resources of patients or viewed them as pathological
62
bull Consider that a recent national survey of US psychiatrists found that 56 said they never rarely or only sometimes inquire about religiousspiritual issues in patients with depression or anxiety [16]
63
![Page 39: Religion, Spirituality, and Health · Review Article •Religion, Spirituality, and Health: • The Research and Clinical Implications • - Koenig, Harold G. "Religion, spirituality,](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022062605/5fcb0bcd7925581572559072/html5/thumbnails/39.jpg)
9 Clinical Implications
bull 91 Rationale for Integrating Spirituality
bull 92 How to Integrate Spirituality into Patient Care
bull 10 Conclusions
39
bull Conflict of Interests
bull Acknowledgment
bull References 601
40
bull The support to write this paper was provided in part by the John Templeton Foundation
41
bull - Koenig Harold G Religion spirituality and health The research and clinical implications
International Scholarly Research Notices 2012 (2012) اعالمیه های بین المللی تحقیقات علمی
42
Review Article bull Religion Spirituality and Health The
Research and Clinical Implications
bull - Koenig Harold G Religion spirituality and health The research and clinical implications International
Scholarly Research Notices 2012 (2012) اعالمیه های بین المللی تحقیقات علمی
43
1 Historical Background and Introduction
bull Religion medicine and healthcare have been related in one way or another in all population groups since the beginning of recorded history
44
bull Only in recent times have these systems of healing been separated
bull and this separation has occurred largely in highly developed nations
bull in many developing countries there is little or no such separation
45
bull The history of religion medicine and healthcare in developed countries of the West though is a fascinating one
bull The first hospitals in the West for the care of the sick in the general population were built by religious organizations and staffed by religious orders
46
bull Throughout the Middle Ages and up through the French Revolution physicians were often clergy
bull For hundreds of years in fact religious institutions were responsible for licensing physicians to practice medicine
bull In the American colonies in particular many of the clergy were also physiciansmdashoften as a second job that helped to supplement their meager income from church work
47
bull Care for those with mental health problems in the West also had its roots within monasteries and religious communities [2]
bull In 1247 the Priory of St Mary of Bethlehem was built in London on the Thames River [3]
48
bull Originally designed to house ldquodistracted peoplerdquo this was Europersquos (and perhaps the worldrsquos) first mental hospital
bull In 1547 however St Maryrsquos was torn down and replaced by Bethlehem or Bethlem Hospital [4]
49
bull Over the years as secular authorities took control over the institution the hospital became famous for its inhumane treatment of the mentally ill who were often chained [5]thinspdunked in water or beaten as necessary to control them
bull In later years an admission fee (2 pence) was charged to the general public to observe the patients abusing themselves or other patients [4]
50
bull The hospital eventually became known as ldquobedlamrdquo (from which comes the word used today to indicate a state of confusion and disarray)
51
bull In response to the abuses in mental hospitals and precipitated by the death of a Quaker patient in New York asylum in England an English merchant and devout Quaker named William Tuke began to promote a new form of treatment of the mentally ill called ldquomoral treatmentrdquo
52
bull In 1796 he and the Quaker community in England established their own asylum known as the York Retreat [6]
53
bull Not long after this the Quakers brought moral treatment to America where it became the dominant form of psychiatric care in that country [6]
54
bull Established in Philadelphia by the Quakers in 1813 ldquoFriends Hospitalrdquo (or Friends Asylum) became the first private institution in the United States dedicated solely to the care of those with mental illness [7]
55
bull Psychiatric hospitals that followed in the footsteps of Friends Asylum were the McLean Hospital (established in 1818 in Boston and now associated with Harvard) the Bloomingdale Asylum (established in 1821 in New York) and the Hartford Retreat (established in 1824 in Connecticut)mdashall modeled after the York Retreat and implementing moral treatment as the dominant therapy
56
bull It was not until modern times that religion and psychiatry began to part paths
bull This separation was encouraged by the psychiatrist Sigmund Freud
57
bull After being ldquointroducedrdquo to the neurotic and hysterical aspects of religion by the famous French neurologist Jean Charcot in the mid-1880s
bull Freud began to emphasize this in a widely read series of publications from 1907 through his death in 1939
58
bull These writings left a legacy that would influence the practice of psychiatrymdashespecially psychotherapymdashfor the rest of the century
bull and lead to a true schism between religion and mental health care
59
bull That schism was illustrated in 1993 by a systematic review of the religious content of DSM-III-R which found nearly one-quarter of all cases of mental illness being described using religious illustrations [12]
60
bull The conflict has continued to the present day Consider recent e-letters in response to two articles published in The Psychiatristthinspabout this topic [13 14] and an even more recent debate about the role of prayer in psychiatric practice [15]
61
bull This conflict has manifested in the clinical work of many mental health professionals who have generally ignored the religious resources of patients or viewed them as pathological
62
bull Consider that a recent national survey of US psychiatrists found that 56 said they never rarely or only sometimes inquire about religiousspiritual issues in patients with depression or anxiety [16]
63
![Page 40: Religion, Spirituality, and Health · Review Article •Religion, Spirituality, and Health: • The Research and Clinical Implications • - Koenig, Harold G. "Religion, spirituality,](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022062605/5fcb0bcd7925581572559072/html5/thumbnails/40.jpg)
bull Conflict of Interests
bull Acknowledgment
bull References 601
40
bull The support to write this paper was provided in part by the John Templeton Foundation
41
bull - Koenig Harold G Religion spirituality and health The research and clinical implications
International Scholarly Research Notices 2012 (2012) اعالمیه های بین المللی تحقیقات علمی
42
Review Article bull Religion Spirituality and Health The
Research and Clinical Implications
bull - Koenig Harold G Religion spirituality and health The research and clinical implications International
Scholarly Research Notices 2012 (2012) اعالمیه های بین المللی تحقیقات علمی
43
1 Historical Background and Introduction
bull Religion medicine and healthcare have been related in one way or another in all population groups since the beginning of recorded history
44
bull Only in recent times have these systems of healing been separated
bull and this separation has occurred largely in highly developed nations
bull in many developing countries there is little or no such separation
45
bull The history of religion medicine and healthcare in developed countries of the West though is a fascinating one
bull The first hospitals in the West for the care of the sick in the general population were built by religious organizations and staffed by religious orders
46
bull Throughout the Middle Ages and up through the French Revolution physicians were often clergy
bull For hundreds of years in fact religious institutions were responsible for licensing physicians to practice medicine
bull In the American colonies in particular many of the clergy were also physiciansmdashoften as a second job that helped to supplement their meager income from church work
47
bull Care for those with mental health problems in the West also had its roots within monasteries and religious communities [2]
bull In 1247 the Priory of St Mary of Bethlehem was built in London on the Thames River [3]
48
bull Originally designed to house ldquodistracted peoplerdquo this was Europersquos (and perhaps the worldrsquos) first mental hospital
bull In 1547 however St Maryrsquos was torn down and replaced by Bethlehem or Bethlem Hospital [4]
49
bull Over the years as secular authorities took control over the institution the hospital became famous for its inhumane treatment of the mentally ill who were often chained [5]thinspdunked in water or beaten as necessary to control them
bull In later years an admission fee (2 pence) was charged to the general public to observe the patients abusing themselves or other patients [4]
50
bull The hospital eventually became known as ldquobedlamrdquo (from which comes the word used today to indicate a state of confusion and disarray)
51
bull In response to the abuses in mental hospitals and precipitated by the death of a Quaker patient in New York asylum in England an English merchant and devout Quaker named William Tuke began to promote a new form of treatment of the mentally ill called ldquomoral treatmentrdquo
52
bull In 1796 he and the Quaker community in England established their own asylum known as the York Retreat [6]
53
bull Not long after this the Quakers brought moral treatment to America where it became the dominant form of psychiatric care in that country [6]
54
bull Established in Philadelphia by the Quakers in 1813 ldquoFriends Hospitalrdquo (or Friends Asylum) became the first private institution in the United States dedicated solely to the care of those with mental illness [7]
55
bull Psychiatric hospitals that followed in the footsteps of Friends Asylum were the McLean Hospital (established in 1818 in Boston and now associated with Harvard) the Bloomingdale Asylum (established in 1821 in New York) and the Hartford Retreat (established in 1824 in Connecticut)mdashall modeled after the York Retreat and implementing moral treatment as the dominant therapy
56
bull It was not until modern times that religion and psychiatry began to part paths
bull This separation was encouraged by the psychiatrist Sigmund Freud
57
bull After being ldquointroducedrdquo to the neurotic and hysterical aspects of religion by the famous French neurologist Jean Charcot in the mid-1880s
bull Freud began to emphasize this in a widely read series of publications from 1907 through his death in 1939
58
bull These writings left a legacy that would influence the practice of psychiatrymdashespecially psychotherapymdashfor the rest of the century
bull and lead to a true schism between religion and mental health care
59
bull That schism was illustrated in 1993 by a systematic review of the religious content of DSM-III-R which found nearly one-quarter of all cases of mental illness being described using religious illustrations [12]
60
bull The conflict has continued to the present day Consider recent e-letters in response to two articles published in The Psychiatristthinspabout this topic [13 14] and an even more recent debate about the role of prayer in psychiatric practice [15]
61
bull This conflict has manifested in the clinical work of many mental health professionals who have generally ignored the religious resources of patients or viewed them as pathological
62
bull Consider that a recent national survey of US psychiatrists found that 56 said they never rarely or only sometimes inquire about religiousspiritual issues in patients with depression or anxiety [16]
63
![Page 41: Religion, Spirituality, and Health · Review Article •Religion, Spirituality, and Health: • The Research and Clinical Implications • - Koenig, Harold G. "Religion, spirituality,](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022062605/5fcb0bcd7925581572559072/html5/thumbnails/41.jpg)
bull The support to write this paper was provided in part by the John Templeton Foundation
41
bull - Koenig Harold G Religion spirituality and health The research and clinical implications
International Scholarly Research Notices 2012 (2012) اعالمیه های بین المللی تحقیقات علمی
42
Review Article bull Religion Spirituality and Health The
Research and Clinical Implications
bull - Koenig Harold G Religion spirituality and health The research and clinical implications International
Scholarly Research Notices 2012 (2012) اعالمیه های بین المللی تحقیقات علمی
43
1 Historical Background and Introduction
bull Religion medicine and healthcare have been related in one way or another in all population groups since the beginning of recorded history
44
bull Only in recent times have these systems of healing been separated
bull and this separation has occurred largely in highly developed nations
bull in many developing countries there is little or no such separation
45
bull The history of religion medicine and healthcare in developed countries of the West though is a fascinating one
bull The first hospitals in the West for the care of the sick in the general population were built by religious organizations and staffed by religious orders
46
bull Throughout the Middle Ages and up through the French Revolution physicians were often clergy
bull For hundreds of years in fact religious institutions were responsible for licensing physicians to practice medicine
bull In the American colonies in particular many of the clergy were also physiciansmdashoften as a second job that helped to supplement their meager income from church work
47
bull Care for those with mental health problems in the West also had its roots within monasteries and religious communities [2]
bull In 1247 the Priory of St Mary of Bethlehem was built in London on the Thames River [3]
48
bull Originally designed to house ldquodistracted peoplerdquo this was Europersquos (and perhaps the worldrsquos) first mental hospital
bull In 1547 however St Maryrsquos was torn down and replaced by Bethlehem or Bethlem Hospital [4]
49
bull Over the years as secular authorities took control over the institution the hospital became famous for its inhumane treatment of the mentally ill who were often chained [5]thinspdunked in water or beaten as necessary to control them
bull In later years an admission fee (2 pence) was charged to the general public to observe the patients abusing themselves or other patients [4]
50
bull The hospital eventually became known as ldquobedlamrdquo (from which comes the word used today to indicate a state of confusion and disarray)
51
bull In response to the abuses in mental hospitals and precipitated by the death of a Quaker patient in New York asylum in England an English merchant and devout Quaker named William Tuke began to promote a new form of treatment of the mentally ill called ldquomoral treatmentrdquo
52
bull In 1796 he and the Quaker community in England established their own asylum known as the York Retreat [6]
53
bull Not long after this the Quakers brought moral treatment to America where it became the dominant form of psychiatric care in that country [6]
54
bull Established in Philadelphia by the Quakers in 1813 ldquoFriends Hospitalrdquo (or Friends Asylum) became the first private institution in the United States dedicated solely to the care of those with mental illness [7]
55
bull Psychiatric hospitals that followed in the footsteps of Friends Asylum were the McLean Hospital (established in 1818 in Boston and now associated with Harvard) the Bloomingdale Asylum (established in 1821 in New York) and the Hartford Retreat (established in 1824 in Connecticut)mdashall modeled after the York Retreat and implementing moral treatment as the dominant therapy
56
bull It was not until modern times that religion and psychiatry began to part paths
bull This separation was encouraged by the psychiatrist Sigmund Freud
57
bull After being ldquointroducedrdquo to the neurotic and hysterical aspects of religion by the famous French neurologist Jean Charcot in the mid-1880s
bull Freud began to emphasize this in a widely read series of publications from 1907 through his death in 1939
58
bull These writings left a legacy that would influence the practice of psychiatrymdashespecially psychotherapymdashfor the rest of the century
bull and lead to a true schism between religion and mental health care
59
bull That schism was illustrated in 1993 by a systematic review of the religious content of DSM-III-R which found nearly one-quarter of all cases of mental illness being described using religious illustrations [12]
60
bull The conflict has continued to the present day Consider recent e-letters in response to two articles published in The Psychiatristthinspabout this topic [13 14] and an even more recent debate about the role of prayer in psychiatric practice [15]
61
bull This conflict has manifested in the clinical work of many mental health professionals who have generally ignored the religious resources of patients or viewed them as pathological
62
bull Consider that a recent national survey of US psychiatrists found that 56 said they never rarely or only sometimes inquire about religiousspiritual issues in patients with depression or anxiety [16]
63
![Page 42: Religion, Spirituality, and Health · Review Article •Religion, Spirituality, and Health: • The Research and Clinical Implications • - Koenig, Harold G. "Religion, spirituality,](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022062605/5fcb0bcd7925581572559072/html5/thumbnails/42.jpg)
bull - Koenig Harold G Religion spirituality and health The research and clinical implications
International Scholarly Research Notices 2012 (2012) اعالمیه های بین المللی تحقیقات علمی
42
Review Article bull Religion Spirituality and Health The
Research and Clinical Implications
bull - Koenig Harold G Religion spirituality and health The research and clinical implications International
Scholarly Research Notices 2012 (2012) اعالمیه های بین المللی تحقیقات علمی
43
1 Historical Background and Introduction
bull Religion medicine and healthcare have been related in one way or another in all population groups since the beginning of recorded history
44
bull Only in recent times have these systems of healing been separated
bull and this separation has occurred largely in highly developed nations
bull in many developing countries there is little or no such separation
45
bull The history of religion medicine and healthcare in developed countries of the West though is a fascinating one
bull The first hospitals in the West for the care of the sick in the general population were built by religious organizations and staffed by religious orders
46
bull Throughout the Middle Ages and up through the French Revolution physicians were often clergy
bull For hundreds of years in fact religious institutions were responsible for licensing physicians to practice medicine
bull In the American colonies in particular many of the clergy were also physiciansmdashoften as a second job that helped to supplement their meager income from church work
47
bull Care for those with mental health problems in the West also had its roots within monasteries and religious communities [2]
bull In 1247 the Priory of St Mary of Bethlehem was built in London on the Thames River [3]
48
bull Originally designed to house ldquodistracted peoplerdquo this was Europersquos (and perhaps the worldrsquos) first mental hospital
bull In 1547 however St Maryrsquos was torn down and replaced by Bethlehem or Bethlem Hospital [4]
49
bull Over the years as secular authorities took control over the institution the hospital became famous for its inhumane treatment of the mentally ill who were often chained [5]thinspdunked in water or beaten as necessary to control them
bull In later years an admission fee (2 pence) was charged to the general public to observe the patients abusing themselves or other patients [4]
50
bull The hospital eventually became known as ldquobedlamrdquo (from which comes the word used today to indicate a state of confusion and disarray)
51
bull In response to the abuses in mental hospitals and precipitated by the death of a Quaker patient in New York asylum in England an English merchant and devout Quaker named William Tuke began to promote a new form of treatment of the mentally ill called ldquomoral treatmentrdquo
52
bull In 1796 he and the Quaker community in England established their own asylum known as the York Retreat [6]
53
bull Not long after this the Quakers brought moral treatment to America where it became the dominant form of psychiatric care in that country [6]
54
bull Established in Philadelphia by the Quakers in 1813 ldquoFriends Hospitalrdquo (or Friends Asylum) became the first private institution in the United States dedicated solely to the care of those with mental illness [7]
55
bull Psychiatric hospitals that followed in the footsteps of Friends Asylum were the McLean Hospital (established in 1818 in Boston and now associated with Harvard) the Bloomingdale Asylum (established in 1821 in New York) and the Hartford Retreat (established in 1824 in Connecticut)mdashall modeled after the York Retreat and implementing moral treatment as the dominant therapy
56
bull It was not until modern times that religion and psychiatry began to part paths
bull This separation was encouraged by the psychiatrist Sigmund Freud
57
bull After being ldquointroducedrdquo to the neurotic and hysterical aspects of religion by the famous French neurologist Jean Charcot in the mid-1880s
bull Freud began to emphasize this in a widely read series of publications from 1907 through his death in 1939
58
bull These writings left a legacy that would influence the practice of psychiatrymdashespecially psychotherapymdashfor the rest of the century
bull and lead to a true schism between religion and mental health care
59
bull That schism was illustrated in 1993 by a systematic review of the religious content of DSM-III-R which found nearly one-quarter of all cases of mental illness being described using religious illustrations [12]
60
bull The conflict has continued to the present day Consider recent e-letters in response to two articles published in The Psychiatristthinspabout this topic [13 14] and an even more recent debate about the role of prayer in psychiatric practice [15]
61
bull This conflict has manifested in the clinical work of many mental health professionals who have generally ignored the religious resources of patients or viewed them as pathological
62
bull Consider that a recent national survey of US psychiatrists found that 56 said they never rarely or only sometimes inquire about religiousspiritual issues in patients with depression or anxiety [16]
63
![Page 43: Religion, Spirituality, and Health · Review Article •Religion, Spirituality, and Health: • The Research and Clinical Implications • - Koenig, Harold G. "Religion, spirituality,](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022062605/5fcb0bcd7925581572559072/html5/thumbnails/43.jpg)
Review Article bull Religion Spirituality and Health The
Research and Clinical Implications
bull - Koenig Harold G Religion spirituality and health The research and clinical implications International
Scholarly Research Notices 2012 (2012) اعالمیه های بین المللی تحقیقات علمی
43
1 Historical Background and Introduction
bull Religion medicine and healthcare have been related in one way or another in all population groups since the beginning of recorded history
44
bull Only in recent times have these systems of healing been separated
bull and this separation has occurred largely in highly developed nations
bull in many developing countries there is little or no such separation
45
bull The history of religion medicine and healthcare in developed countries of the West though is a fascinating one
bull The first hospitals in the West for the care of the sick in the general population were built by religious organizations and staffed by religious orders
46
bull Throughout the Middle Ages and up through the French Revolution physicians were often clergy
bull For hundreds of years in fact religious institutions were responsible for licensing physicians to practice medicine
bull In the American colonies in particular many of the clergy were also physiciansmdashoften as a second job that helped to supplement their meager income from church work
47
bull Care for those with mental health problems in the West also had its roots within monasteries and religious communities [2]
bull In 1247 the Priory of St Mary of Bethlehem was built in London on the Thames River [3]
48
bull Originally designed to house ldquodistracted peoplerdquo this was Europersquos (and perhaps the worldrsquos) first mental hospital
bull In 1547 however St Maryrsquos was torn down and replaced by Bethlehem or Bethlem Hospital [4]
49
bull Over the years as secular authorities took control over the institution the hospital became famous for its inhumane treatment of the mentally ill who were often chained [5]thinspdunked in water or beaten as necessary to control them
bull In later years an admission fee (2 pence) was charged to the general public to observe the patients abusing themselves or other patients [4]
50
bull The hospital eventually became known as ldquobedlamrdquo (from which comes the word used today to indicate a state of confusion and disarray)
51
bull In response to the abuses in mental hospitals and precipitated by the death of a Quaker patient in New York asylum in England an English merchant and devout Quaker named William Tuke began to promote a new form of treatment of the mentally ill called ldquomoral treatmentrdquo
52
bull In 1796 he and the Quaker community in England established their own asylum known as the York Retreat [6]
53
bull Not long after this the Quakers brought moral treatment to America where it became the dominant form of psychiatric care in that country [6]
54
bull Established in Philadelphia by the Quakers in 1813 ldquoFriends Hospitalrdquo (or Friends Asylum) became the first private institution in the United States dedicated solely to the care of those with mental illness [7]
55
bull Psychiatric hospitals that followed in the footsteps of Friends Asylum were the McLean Hospital (established in 1818 in Boston and now associated with Harvard) the Bloomingdale Asylum (established in 1821 in New York) and the Hartford Retreat (established in 1824 in Connecticut)mdashall modeled after the York Retreat and implementing moral treatment as the dominant therapy
56
bull It was not until modern times that religion and psychiatry began to part paths
bull This separation was encouraged by the psychiatrist Sigmund Freud
57
bull After being ldquointroducedrdquo to the neurotic and hysterical aspects of religion by the famous French neurologist Jean Charcot in the mid-1880s
bull Freud began to emphasize this in a widely read series of publications from 1907 through his death in 1939
58
bull These writings left a legacy that would influence the practice of psychiatrymdashespecially psychotherapymdashfor the rest of the century
bull and lead to a true schism between religion and mental health care
59
bull That schism was illustrated in 1993 by a systematic review of the religious content of DSM-III-R which found nearly one-quarter of all cases of mental illness being described using religious illustrations [12]
60
bull The conflict has continued to the present day Consider recent e-letters in response to two articles published in The Psychiatristthinspabout this topic [13 14] and an even more recent debate about the role of prayer in psychiatric practice [15]
61
bull This conflict has manifested in the clinical work of many mental health professionals who have generally ignored the religious resources of patients or viewed them as pathological
62
bull Consider that a recent national survey of US psychiatrists found that 56 said they never rarely or only sometimes inquire about religiousspiritual issues in patients with depression or anxiety [16]
63
![Page 44: Religion, Spirituality, and Health · Review Article •Religion, Spirituality, and Health: • The Research and Clinical Implications • - Koenig, Harold G. "Religion, spirituality,](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022062605/5fcb0bcd7925581572559072/html5/thumbnails/44.jpg)
1 Historical Background and Introduction
bull Religion medicine and healthcare have been related in one way or another in all population groups since the beginning of recorded history
44
bull Only in recent times have these systems of healing been separated
bull and this separation has occurred largely in highly developed nations
bull in many developing countries there is little or no such separation
45
bull The history of religion medicine and healthcare in developed countries of the West though is a fascinating one
bull The first hospitals in the West for the care of the sick in the general population were built by religious organizations and staffed by religious orders
46
bull Throughout the Middle Ages and up through the French Revolution physicians were often clergy
bull For hundreds of years in fact religious institutions were responsible for licensing physicians to practice medicine
bull In the American colonies in particular many of the clergy were also physiciansmdashoften as a second job that helped to supplement their meager income from church work
47
bull Care for those with mental health problems in the West also had its roots within monasteries and religious communities [2]
bull In 1247 the Priory of St Mary of Bethlehem was built in London on the Thames River [3]
48
bull Originally designed to house ldquodistracted peoplerdquo this was Europersquos (and perhaps the worldrsquos) first mental hospital
bull In 1547 however St Maryrsquos was torn down and replaced by Bethlehem or Bethlem Hospital [4]
49
bull Over the years as secular authorities took control over the institution the hospital became famous for its inhumane treatment of the mentally ill who were often chained [5]thinspdunked in water or beaten as necessary to control them
bull In later years an admission fee (2 pence) was charged to the general public to observe the patients abusing themselves or other patients [4]
50
bull The hospital eventually became known as ldquobedlamrdquo (from which comes the word used today to indicate a state of confusion and disarray)
51
bull In response to the abuses in mental hospitals and precipitated by the death of a Quaker patient in New York asylum in England an English merchant and devout Quaker named William Tuke began to promote a new form of treatment of the mentally ill called ldquomoral treatmentrdquo
52
bull In 1796 he and the Quaker community in England established their own asylum known as the York Retreat [6]
53
bull Not long after this the Quakers brought moral treatment to America where it became the dominant form of psychiatric care in that country [6]
54
bull Established in Philadelphia by the Quakers in 1813 ldquoFriends Hospitalrdquo (or Friends Asylum) became the first private institution in the United States dedicated solely to the care of those with mental illness [7]
55
bull Psychiatric hospitals that followed in the footsteps of Friends Asylum were the McLean Hospital (established in 1818 in Boston and now associated with Harvard) the Bloomingdale Asylum (established in 1821 in New York) and the Hartford Retreat (established in 1824 in Connecticut)mdashall modeled after the York Retreat and implementing moral treatment as the dominant therapy
56
bull It was not until modern times that religion and psychiatry began to part paths
bull This separation was encouraged by the psychiatrist Sigmund Freud
57
bull After being ldquointroducedrdquo to the neurotic and hysterical aspects of religion by the famous French neurologist Jean Charcot in the mid-1880s
bull Freud began to emphasize this in a widely read series of publications from 1907 through his death in 1939
58
bull These writings left a legacy that would influence the practice of psychiatrymdashespecially psychotherapymdashfor the rest of the century
bull and lead to a true schism between religion and mental health care
59
bull That schism was illustrated in 1993 by a systematic review of the religious content of DSM-III-R which found nearly one-quarter of all cases of mental illness being described using religious illustrations [12]
60
bull The conflict has continued to the present day Consider recent e-letters in response to two articles published in The Psychiatristthinspabout this topic [13 14] and an even more recent debate about the role of prayer in psychiatric practice [15]
61
bull This conflict has manifested in the clinical work of many mental health professionals who have generally ignored the religious resources of patients or viewed them as pathological
62
bull Consider that a recent national survey of US psychiatrists found that 56 said they never rarely or only sometimes inquire about religiousspiritual issues in patients with depression or anxiety [16]
63
![Page 45: Religion, Spirituality, and Health · Review Article •Religion, Spirituality, and Health: • The Research and Clinical Implications • - Koenig, Harold G. "Religion, spirituality,](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022062605/5fcb0bcd7925581572559072/html5/thumbnails/45.jpg)
bull Only in recent times have these systems of healing been separated
bull and this separation has occurred largely in highly developed nations
bull in many developing countries there is little or no such separation
45
bull The history of religion medicine and healthcare in developed countries of the West though is a fascinating one
bull The first hospitals in the West for the care of the sick in the general population were built by religious organizations and staffed by religious orders
46
bull Throughout the Middle Ages and up through the French Revolution physicians were often clergy
bull For hundreds of years in fact religious institutions were responsible for licensing physicians to practice medicine
bull In the American colonies in particular many of the clergy were also physiciansmdashoften as a second job that helped to supplement their meager income from church work
47
bull Care for those with mental health problems in the West also had its roots within monasteries and religious communities [2]
bull In 1247 the Priory of St Mary of Bethlehem was built in London on the Thames River [3]
48
bull Originally designed to house ldquodistracted peoplerdquo this was Europersquos (and perhaps the worldrsquos) first mental hospital
bull In 1547 however St Maryrsquos was torn down and replaced by Bethlehem or Bethlem Hospital [4]
49
bull Over the years as secular authorities took control over the institution the hospital became famous for its inhumane treatment of the mentally ill who were often chained [5]thinspdunked in water or beaten as necessary to control them
bull In later years an admission fee (2 pence) was charged to the general public to observe the patients abusing themselves or other patients [4]
50
bull The hospital eventually became known as ldquobedlamrdquo (from which comes the word used today to indicate a state of confusion and disarray)
51
bull In response to the abuses in mental hospitals and precipitated by the death of a Quaker patient in New York asylum in England an English merchant and devout Quaker named William Tuke began to promote a new form of treatment of the mentally ill called ldquomoral treatmentrdquo
52
bull In 1796 he and the Quaker community in England established their own asylum known as the York Retreat [6]
53
bull Not long after this the Quakers brought moral treatment to America where it became the dominant form of psychiatric care in that country [6]
54
bull Established in Philadelphia by the Quakers in 1813 ldquoFriends Hospitalrdquo (or Friends Asylum) became the first private institution in the United States dedicated solely to the care of those with mental illness [7]
55
bull Psychiatric hospitals that followed in the footsteps of Friends Asylum were the McLean Hospital (established in 1818 in Boston and now associated with Harvard) the Bloomingdale Asylum (established in 1821 in New York) and the Hartford Retreat (established in 1824 in Connecticut)mdashall modeled after the York Retreat and implementing moral treatment as the dominant therapy
56
bull It was not until modern times that religion and psychiatry began to part paths
bull This separation was encouraged by the psychiatrist Sigmund Freud
57
bull After being ldquointroducedrdquo to the neurotic and hysterical aspects of religion by the famous French neurologist Jean Charcot in the mid-1880s
bull Freud began to emphasize this in a widely read series of publications from 1907 through his death in 1939
58
bull These writings left a legacy that would influence the practice of psychiatrymdashespecially psychotherapymdashfor the rest of the century
bull and lead to a true schism between religion and mental health care
59
bull That schism was illustrated in 1993 by a systematic review of the religious content of DSM-III-R which found nearly one-quarter of all cases of mental illness being described using religious illustrations [12]
60
bull The conflict has continued to the present day Consider recent e-letters in response to two articles published in The Psychiatristthinspabout this topic [13 14] and an even more recent debate about the role of prayer in psychiatric practice [15]
61
bull This conflict has manifested in the clinical work of many mental health professionals who have generally ignored the religious resources of patients or viewed them as pathological
62
bull Consider that a recent national survey of US psychiatrists found that 56 said they never rarely or only sometimes inquire about religiousspiritual issues in patients with depression or anxiety [16]
63
![Page 46: Religion, Spirituality, and Health · Review Article •Religion, Spirituality, and Health: • The Research and Clinical Implications • - Koenig, Harold G. "Religion, spirituality,](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022062605/5fcb0bcd7925581572559072/html5/thumbnails/46.jpg)
bull The history of religion medicine and healthcare in developed countries of the West though is a fascinating one
bull The first hospitals in the West for the care of the sick in the general population were built by religious organizations and staffed by religious orders
46
bull Throughout the Middle Ages and up through the French Revolution physicians were often clergy
bull For hundreds of years in fact religious institutions were responsible for licensing physicians to practice medicine
bull In the American colonies in particular many of the clergy were also physiciansmdashoften as a second job that helped to supplement their meager income from church work
47
bull Care for those with mental health problems in the West also had its roots within monasteries and religious communities [2]
bull In 1247 the Priory of St Mary of Bethlehem was built in London on the Thames River [3]
48
bull Originally designed to house ldquodistracted peoplerdquo this was Europersquos (and perhaps the worldrsquos) first mental hospital
bull In 1547 however St Maryrsquos was torn down and replaced by Bethlehem or Bethlem Hospital [4]
49
bull Over the years as secular authorities took control over the institution the hospital became famous for its inhumane treatment of the mentally ill who were often chained [5]thinspdunked in water or beaten as necessary to control them
bull In later years an admission fee (2 pence) was charged to the general public to observe the patients abusing themselves or other patients [4]
50
bull The hospital eventually became known as ldquobedlamrdquo (from which comes the word used today to indicate a state of confusion and disarray)
51
bull In response to the abuses in mental hospitals and precipitated by the death of a Quaker patient in New York asylum in England an English merchant and devout Quaker named William Tuke began to promote a new form of treatment of the mentally ill called ldquomoral treatmentrdquo
52
bull In 1796 he and the Quaker community in England established their own asylum known as the York Retreat [6]
53
bull Not long after this the Quakers brought moral treatment to America where it became the dominant form of psychiatric care in that country [6]
54
bull Established in Philadelphia by the Quakers in 1813 ldquoFriends Hospitalrdquo (or Friends Asylum) became the first private institution in the United States dedicated solely to the care of those with mental illness [7]
55
bull Psychiatric hospitals that followed in the footsteps of Friends Asylum were the McLean Hospital (established in 1818 in Boston and now associated with Harvard) the Bloomingdale Asylum (established in 1821 in New York) and the Hartford Retreat (established in 1824 in Connecticut)mdashall modeled after the York Retreat and implementing moral treatment as the dominant therapy
56
bull It was not until modern times that religion and psychiatry began to part paths
bull This separation was encouraged by the psychiatrist Sigmund Freud
57
bull After being ldquointroducedrdquo to the neurotic and hysterical aspects of religion by the famous French neurologist Jean Charcot in the mid-1880s
bull Freud began to emphasize this in a widely read series of publications from 1907 through his death in 1939
58
bull These writings left a legacy that would influence the practice of psychiatrymdashespecially psychotherapymdashfor the rest of the century
bull and lead to a true schism between religion and mental health care
59
bull That schism was illustrated in 1993 by a systematic review of the religious content of DSM-III-R which found nearly one-quarter of all cases of mental illness being described using religious illustrations [12]
60
bull The conflict has continued to the present day Consider recent e-letters in response to two articles published in The Psychiatristthinspabout this topic [13 14] and an even more recent debate about the role of prayer in psychiatric practice [15]
61
bull This conflict has manifested in the clinical work of many mental health professionals who have generally ignored the religious resources of patients or viewed them as pathological
62
bull Consider that a recent national survey of US psychiatrists found that 56 said they never rarely or only sometimes inquire about religiousspiritual issues in patients with depression or anxiety [16]
63
![Page 47: Religion, Spirituality, and Health · Review Article •Religion, Spirituality, and Health: • The Research and Clinical Implications • - Koenig, Harold G. "Religion, spirituality,](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022062605/5fcb0bcd7925581572559072/html5/thumbnails/47.jpg)
bull Throughout the Middle Ages and up through the French Revolution physicians were often clergy
bull For hundreds of years in fact religious institutions were responsible for licensing physicians to practice medicine
bull In the American colonies in particular many of the clergy were also physiciansmdashoften as a second job that helped to supplement their meager income from church work
47
bull Care for those with mental health problems in the West also had its roots within monasteries and religious communities [2]
bull In 1247 the Priory of St Mary of Bethlehem was built in London on the Thames River [3]
48
bull Originally designed to house ldquodistracted peoplerdquo this was Europersquos (and perhaps the worldrsquos) first mental hospital
bull In 1547 however St Maryrsquos was torn down and replaced by Bethlehem or Bethlem Hospital [4]
49
bull Over the years as secular authorities took control over the institution the hospital became famous for its inhumane treatment of the mentally ill who were often chained [5]thinspdunked in water or beaten as necessary to control them
bull In later years an admission fee (2 pence) was charged to the general public to observe the patients abusing themselves or other patients [4]
50
bull The hospital eventually became known as ldquobedlamrdquo (from which comes the word used today to indicate a state of confusion and disarray)
51
bull In response to the abuses in mental hospitals and precipitated by the death of a Quaker patient in New York asylum in England an English merchant and devout Quaker named William Tuke began to promote a new form of treatment of the mentally ill called ldquomoral treatmentrdquo
52
bull In 1796 he and the Quaker community in England established their own asylum known as the York Retreat [6]
53
bull Not long after this the Quakers brought moral treatment to America where it became the dominant form of psychiatric care in that country [6]
54
bull Established in Philadelphia by the Quakers in 1813 ldquoFriends Hospitalrdquo (or Friends Asylum) became the first private institution in the United States dedicated solely to the care of those with mental illness [7]
55
bull Psychiatric hospitals that followed in the footsteps of Friends Asylum were the McLean Hospital (established in 1818 in Boston and now associated with Harvard) the Bloomingdale Asylum (established in 1821 in New York) and the Hartford Retreat (established in 1824 in Connecticut)mdashall modeled after the York Retreat and implementing moral treatment as the dominant therapy
56
bull It was not until modern times that religion and psychiatry began to part paths
bull This separation was encouraged by the psychiatrist Sigmund Freud
57
bull After being ldquointroducedrdquo to the neurotic and hysterical aspects of religion by the famous French neurologist Jean Charcot in the mid-1880s
bull Freud began to emphasize this in a widely read series of publications from 1907 through his death in 1939
58
bull These writings left a legacy that would influence the practice of psychiatrymdashespecially psychotherapymdashfor the rest of the century
bull and lead to a true schism between religion and mental health care
59
bull That schism was illustrated in 1993 by a systematic review of the religious content of DSM-III-R which found nearly one-quarter of all cases of mental illness being described using religious illustrations [12]
60
bull The conflict has continued to the present day Consider recent e-letters in response to two articles published in The Psychiatristthinspabout this topic [13 14] and an even more recent debate about the role of prayer in psychiatric practice [15]
61
bull This conflict has manifested in the clinical work of many mental health professionals who have generally ignored the religious resources of patients or viewed them as pathological
62
bull Consider that a recent national survey of US psychiatrists found that 56 said they never rarely or only sometimes inquire about religiousspiritual issues in patients with depression or anxiety [16]
63
![Page 48: Religion, Spirituality, and Health · Review Article •Religion, Spirituality, and Health: • The Research and Clinical Implications • - Koenig, Harold G. "Religion, spirituality,](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022062605/5fcb0bcd7925581572559072/html5/thumbnails/48.jpg)
bull Care for those with mental health problems in the West also had its roots within monasteries and religious communities [2]
bull In 1247 the Priory of St Mary of Bethlehem was built in London on the Thames River [3]
48
bull Originally designed to house ldquodistracted peoplerdquo this was Europersquos (and perhaps the worldrsquos) first mental hospital
bull In 1547 however St Maryrsquos was torn down and replaced by Bethlehem or Bethlem Hospital [4]
49
bull Over the years as secular authorities took control over the institution the hospital became famous for its inhumane treatment of the mentally ill who were often chained [5]thinspdunked in water or beaten as necessary to control them
bull In later years an admission fee (2 pence) was charged to the general public to observe the patients abusing themselves or other patients [4]
50
bull The hospital eventually became known as ldquobedlamrdquo (from which comes the word used today to indicate a state of confusion and disarray)
51
bull In response to the abuses in mental hospitals and precipitated by the death of a Quaker patient in New York asylum in England an English merchant and devout Quaker named William Tuke began to promote a new form of treatment of the mentally ill called ldquomoral treatmentrdquo
52
bull In 1796 he and the Quaker community in England established their own asylum known as the York Retreat [6]
53
bull Not long after this the Quakers brought moral treatment to America where it became the dominant form of psychiatric care in that country [6]
54
bull Established in Philadelphia by the Quakers in 1813 ldquoFriends Hospitalrdquo (or Friends Asylum) became the first private institution in the United States dedicated solely to the care of those with mental illness [7]
55
bull Psychiatric hospitals that followed in the footsteps of Friends Asylum were the McLean Hospital (established in 1818 in Boston and now associated with Harvard) the Bloomingdale Asylum (established in 1821 in New York) and the Hartford Retreat (established in 1824 in Connecticut)mdashall modeled after the York Retreat and implementing moral treatment as the dominant therapy
56
bull It was not until modern times that religion and psychiatry began to part paths
bull This separation was encouraged by the psychiatrist Sigmund Freud
57
bull After being ldquointroducedrdquo to the neurotic and hysterical aspects of religion by the famous French neurologist Jean Charcot in the mid-1880s
bull Freud began to emphasize this in a widely read series of publications from 1907 through his death in 1939
58
bull These writings left a legacy that would influence the practice of psychiatrymdashespecially psychotherapymdashfor the rest of the century
bull and lead to a true schism between religion and mental health care
59
bull That schism was illustrated in 1993 by a systematic review of the religious content of DSM-III-R which found nearly one-quarter of all cases of mental illness being described using religious illustrations [12]
60
bull The conflict has continued to the present day Consider recent e-letters in response to two articles published in The Psychiatristthinspabout this topic [13 14] and an even more recent debate about the role of prayer in psychiatric practice [15]
61
bull This conflict has manifested in the clinical work of many mental health professionals who have generally ignored the religious resources of patients or viewed them as pathological
62
bull Consider that a recent national survey of US psychiatrists found that 56 said they never rarely or only sometimes inquire about religiousspiritual issues in patients with depression or anxiety [16]
63
![Page 49: Religion, Spirituality, and Health · Review Article •Religion, Spirituality, and Health: • The Research and Clinical Implications • - Koenig, Harold G. "Religion, spirituality,](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022062605/5fcb0bcd7925581572559072/html5/thumbnails/49.jpg)
bull Originally designed to house ldquodistracted peoplerdquo this was Europersquos (and perhaps the worldrsquos) first mental hospital
bull In 1547 however St Maryrsquos was torn down and replaced by Bethlehem or Bethlem Hospital [4]
49
bull Over the years as secular authorities took control over the institution the hospital became famous for its inhumane treatment of the mentally ill who were often chained [5]thinspdunked in water or beaten as necessary to control them
bull In later years an admission fee (2 pence) was charged to the general public to observe the patients abusing themselves or other patients [4]
50
bull The hospital eventually became known as ldquobedlamrdquo (from which comes the word used today to indicate a state of confusion and disarray)
51
bull In response to the abuses in mental hospitals and precipitated by the death of a Quaker patient in New York asylum in England an English merchant and devout Quaker named William Tuke began to promote a new form of treatment of the mentally ill called ldquomoral treatmentrdquo
52
bull In 1796 he and the Quaker community in England established their own asylum known as the York Retreat [6]
53
bull Not long after this the Quakers brought moral treatment to America where it became the dominant form of psychiatric care in that country [6]
54
bull Established in Philadelphia by the Quakers in 1813 ldquoFriends Hospitalrdquo (or Friends Asylum) became the first private institution in the United States dedicated solely to the care of those with mental illness [7]
55
bull Psychiatric hospitals that followed in the footsteps of Friends Asylum were the McLean Hospital (established in 1818 in Boston and now associated with Harvard) the Bloomingdale Asylum (established in 1821 in New York) and the Hartford Retreat (established in 1824 in Connecticut)mdashall modeled after the York Retreat and implementing moral treatment as the dominant therapy
56
bull It was not until modern times that religion and psychiatry began to part paths
bull This separation was encouraged by the psychiatrist Sigmund Freud
57
bull After being ldquointroducedrdquo to the neurotic and hysterical aspects of religion by the famous French neurologist Jean Charcot in the mid-1880s
bull Freud began to emphasize this in a widely read series of publications from 1907 through his death in 1939
58
bull These writings left a legacy that would influence the practice of psychiatrymdashespecially psychotherapymdashfor the rest of the century
bull and lead to a true schism between religion and mental health care
59
bull That schism was illustrated in 1993 by a systematic review of the religious content of DSM-III-R which found nearly one-quarter of all cases of mental illness being described using religious illustrations [12]
60
bull The conflict has continued to the present day Consider recent e-letters in response to two articles published in The Psychiatristthinspabout this topic [13 14] and an even more recent debate about the role of prayer in psychiatric practice [15]
61
bull This conflict has manifested in the clinical work of many mental health professionals who have generally ignored the religious resources of patients or viewed them as pathological
62
bull Consider that a recent national survey of US psychiatrists found that 56 said they never rarely or only sometimes inquire about religiousspiritual issues in patients with depression or anxiety [16]
63
![Page 50: Religion, Spirituality, and Health · Review Article •Religion, Spirituality, and Health: • The Research and Clinical Implications • - Koenig, Harold G. "Religion, spirituality,](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022062605/5fcb0bcd7925581572559072/html5/thumbnails/50.jpg)
bull Over the years as secular authorities took control over the institution the hospital became famous for its inhumane treatment of the mentally ill who were often chained [5]thinspdunked in water or beaten as necessary to control them
bull In later years an admission fee (2 pence) was charged to the general public to observe the patients abusing themselves or other patients [4]
50
bull The hospital eventually became known as ldquobedlamrdquo (from which comes the word used today to indicate a state of confusion and disarray)
51
bull In response to the abuses in mental hospitals and precipitated by the death of a Quaker patient in New York asylum in England an English merchant and devout Quaker named William Tuke began to promote a new form of treatment of the mentally ill called ldquomoral treatmentrdquo
52
bull In 1796 he and the Quaker community in England established their own asylum known as the York Retreat [6]
53
bull Not long after this the Quakers brought moral treatment to America where it became the dominant form of psychiatric care in that country [6]
54
bull Established in Philadelphia by the Quakers in 1813 ldquoFriends Hospitalrdquo (or Friends Asylum) became the first private institution in the United States dedicated solely to the care of those with mental illness [7]
55
bull Psychiatric hospitals that followed in the footsteps of Friends Asylum were the McLean Hospital (established in 1818 in Boston and now associated with Harvard) the Bloomingdale Asylum (established in 1821 in New York) and the Hartford Retreat (established in 1824 in Connecticut)mdashall modeled after the York Retreat and implementing moral treatment as the dominant therapy
56
bull It was not until modern times that religion and psychiatry began to part paths
bull This separation was encouraged by the psychiatrist Sigmund Freud
57
bull After being ldquointroducedrdquo to the neurotic and hysterical aspects of religion by the famous French neurologist Jean Charcot in the mid-1880s
bull Freud began to emphasize this in a widely read series of publications from 1907 through his death in 1939
58
bull These writings left a legacy that would influence the practice of psychiatrymdashespecially psychotherapymdashfor the rest of the century
bull and lead to a true schism between religion and mental health care
59
bull That schism was illustrated in 1993 by a systematic review of the religious content of DSM-III-R which found nearly one-quarter of all cases of mental illness being described using religious illustrations [12]
60
bull The conflict has continued to the present day Consider recent e-letters in response to two articles published in The Psychiatristthinspabout this topic [13 14] and an even more recent debate about the role of prayer in psychiatric practice [15]
61
bull This conflict has manifested in the clinical work of many mental health professionals who have generally ignored the religious resources of patients or viewed them as pathological
62
bull Consider that a recent national survey of US psychiatrists found that 56 said they never rarely or only sometimes inquire about religiousspiritual issues in patients with depression or anxiety [16]
63
![Page 51: Religion, Spirituality, and Health · Review Article •Religion, Spirituality, and Health: • The Research and Clinical Implications • - Koenig, Harold G. "Religion, spirituality,](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022062605/5fcb0bcd7925581572559072/html5/thumbnails/51.jpg)
bull The hospital eventually became known as ldquobedlamrdquo (from which comes the word used today to indicate a state of confusion and disarray)
51
bull In response to the abuses in mental hospitals and precipitated by the death of a Quaker patient in New York asylum in England an English merchant and devout Quaker named William Tuke began to promote a new form of treatment of the mentally ill called ldquomoral treatmentrdquo
52
bull In 1796 he and the Quaker community in England established their own asylum known as the York Retreat [6]
53
bull Not long after this the Quakers brought moral treatment to America where it became the dominant form of psychiatric care in that country [6]
54
bull Established in Philadelphia by the Quakers in 1813 ldquoFriends Hospitalrdquo (or Friends Asylum) became the first private institution in the United States dedicated solely to the care of those with mental illness [7]
55
bull Psychiatric hospitals that followed in the footsteps of Friends Asylum were the McLean Hospital (established in 1818 in Boston and now associated with Harvard) the Bloomingdale Asylum (established in 1821 in New York) and the Hartford Retreat (established in 1824 in Connecticut)mdashall modeled after the York Retreat and implementing moral treatment as the dominant therapy
56
bull It was not until modern times that religion and psychiatry began to part paths
bull This separation was encouraged by the psychiatrist Sigmund Freud
57
bull After being ldquointroducedrdquo to the neurotic and hysterical aspects of religion by the famous French neurologist Jean Charcot in the mid-1880s
bull Freud began to emphasize this in a widely read series of publications from 1907 through his death in 1939
58
bull These writings left a legacy that would influence the practice of psychiatrymdashespecially psychotherapymdashfor the rest of the century
bull and lead to a true schism between religion and mental health care
59
bull That schism was illustrated in 1993 by a systematic review of the religious content of DSM-III-R which found nearly one-quarter of all cases of mental illness being described using religious illustrations [12]
60
bull The conflict has continued to the present day Consider recent e-letters in response to two articles published in The Psychiatristthinspabout this topic [13 14] and an even more recent debate about the role of prayer in psychiatric practice [15]
61
bull This conflict has manifested in the clinical work of many mental health professionals who have generally ignored the religious resources of patients or viewed them as pathological
62
bull Consider that a recent national survey of US psychiatrists found that 56 said they never rarely or only sometimes inquire about religiousspiritual issues in patients with depression or anxiety [16]
63
![Page 52: Religion, Spirituality, and Health · Review Article •Religion, Spirituality, and Health: • The Research and Clinical Implications • - Koenig, Harold G. "Religion, spirituality,](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022062605/5fcb0bcd7925581572559072/html5/thumbnails/52.jpg)
bull In response to the abuses in mental hospitals and precipitated by the death of a Quaker patient in New York asylum in England an English merchant and devout Quaker named William Tuke began to promote a new form of treatment of the mentally ill called ldquomoral treatmentrdquo
52
bull In 1796 he and the Quaker community in England established their own asylum known as the York Retreat [6]
53
bull Not long after this the Quakers brought moral treatment to America where it became the dominant form of psychiatric care in that country [6]
54
bull Established in Philadelphia by the Quakers in 1813 ldquoFriends Hospitalrdquo (or Friends Asylum) became the first private institution in the United States dedicated solely to the care of those with mental illness [7]
55
bull Psychiatric hospitals that followed in the footsteps of Friends Asylum were the McLean Hospital (established in 1818 in Boston and now associated with Harvard) the Bloomingdale Asylum (established in 1821 in New York) and the Hartford Retreat (established in 1824 in Connecticut)mdashall modeled after the York Retreat and implementing moral treatment as the dominant therapy
56
bull It was not until modern times that religion and psychiatry began to part paths
bull This separation was encouraged by the psychiatrist Sigmund Freud
57
bull After being ldquointroducedrdquo to the neurotic and hysterical aspects of religion by the famous French neurologist Jean Charcot in the mid-1880s
bull Freud began to emphasize this in a widely read series of publications from 1907 through his death in 1939
58
bull These writings left a legacy that would influence the practice of psychiatrymdashespecially psychotherapymdashfor the rest of the century
bull and lead to a true schism between religion and mental health care
59
bull That schism was illustrated in 1993 by a systematic review of the religious content of DSM-III-R which found nearly one-quarter of all cases of mental illness being described using religious illustrations [12]
60
bull The conflict has continued to the present day Consider recent e-letters in response to two articles published in The Psychiatristthinspabout this topic [13 14] and an even more recent debate about the role of prayer in psychiatric practice [15]
61
bull This conflict has manifested in the clinical work of many mental health professionals who have generally ignored the religious resources of patients or viewed them as pathological
62
bull Consider that a recent national survey of US psychiatrists found that 56 said they never rarely or only sometimes inquire about religiousspiritual issues in patients with depression or anxiety [16]
63
![Page 53: Religion, Spirituality, and Health · Review Article •Religion, Spirituality, and Health: • The Research and Clinical Implications • - Koenig, Harold G. "Religion, spirituality,](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022062605/5fcb0bcd7925581572559072/html5/thumbnails/53.jpg)
bull In 1796 he and the Quaker community in England established their own asylum known as the York Retreat [6]
53
bull Not long after this the Quakers brought moral treatment to America where it became the dominant form of psychiatric care in that country [6]
54
bull Established in Philadelphia by the Quakers in 1813 ldquoFriends Hospitalrdquo (or Friends Asylum) became the first private institution in the United States dedicated solely to the care of those with mental illness [7]
55
bull Psychiatric hospitals that followed in the footsteps of Friends Asylum were the McLean Hospital (established in 1818 in Boston and now associated with Harvard) the Bloomingdale Asylum (established in 1821 in New York) and the Hartford Retreat (established in 1824 in Connecticut)mdashall modeled after the York Retreat and implementing moral treatment as the dominant therapy
56
bull It was not until modern times that religion and psychiatry began to part paths
bull This separation was encouraged by the psychiatrist Sigmund Freud
57
bull After being ldquointroducedrdquo to the neurotic and hysterical aspects of religion by the famous French neurologist Jean Charcot in the mid-1880s
bull Freud began to emphasize this in a widely read series of publications from 1907 through his death in 1939
58
bull These writings left a legacy that would influence the practice of psychiatrymdashespecially psychotherapymdashfor the rest of the century
bull and lead to a true schism between religion and mental health care
59
bull That schism was illustrated in 1993 by a systematic review of the religious content of DSM-III-R which found nearly one-quarter of all cases of mental illness being described using religious illustrations [12]
60
bull The conflict has continued to the present day Consider recent e-letters in response to two articles published in The Psychiatristthinspabout this topic [13 14] and an even more recent debate about the role of prayer in psychiatric practice [15]
61
bull This conflict has manifested in the clinical work of many mental health professionals who have generally ignored the religious resources of patients or viewed them as pathological
62
bull Consider that a recent national survey of US psychiatrists found that 56 said they never rarely or only sometimes inquire about religiousspiritual issues in patients with depression or anxiety [16]
63
![Page 54: Religion, Spirituality, and Health · Review Article •Religion, Spirituality, and Health: • The Research and Clinical Implications • - Koenig, Harold G. "Religion, spirituality,](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022062605/5fcb0bcd7925581572559072/html5/thumbnails/54.jpg)
bull Not long after this the Quakers brought moral treatment to America where it became the dominant form of psychiatric care in that country [6]
54
bull Established in Philadelphia by the Quakers in 1813 ldquoFriends Hospitalrdquo (or Friends Asylum) became the first private institution in the United States dedicated solely to the care of those with mental illness [7]
55
bull Psychiatric hospitals that followed in the footsteps of Friends Asylum were the McLean Hospital (established in 1818 in Boston and now associated with Harvard) the Bloomingdale Asylum (established in 1821 in New York) and the Hartford Retreat (established in 1824 in Connecticut)mdashall modeled after the York Retreat and implementing moral treatment as the dominant therapy
56
bull It was not until modern times that religion and psychiatry began to part paths
bull This separation was encouraged by the psychiatrist Sigmund Freud
57
bull After being ldquointroducedrdquo to the neurotic and hysterical aspects of religion by the famous French neurologist Jean Charcot in the mid-1880s
bull Freud began to emphasize this in a widely read series of publications from 1907 through his death in 1939
58
bull These writings left a legacy that would influence the practice of psychiatrymdashespecially psychotherapymdashfor the rest of the century
bull and lead to a true schism between religion and mental health care
59
bull That schism was illustrated in 1993 by a systematic review of the religious content of DSM-III-R which found nearly one-quarter of all cases of mental illness being described using religious illustrations [12]
60
bull The conflict has continued to the present day Consider recent e-letters in response to two articles published in The Psychiatristthinspabout this topic [13 14] and an even more recent debate about the role of prayer in psychiatric practice [15]
61
bull This conflict has manifested in the clinical work of many mental health professionals who have generally ignored the religious resources of patients or viewed them as pathological
62
bull Consider that a recent national survey of US psychiatrists found that 56 said they never rarely or only sometimes inquire about religiousspiritual issues in patients with depression or anxiety [16]
63
![Page 55: Religion, Spirituality, and Health · Review Article •Religion, Spirituality, and Health: • The Research and Clinical Implications • - Koenig, Harold G. "Religion, spirituality,](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022062605/5fcb0bcd7925581572559072/html5/thumbnails/55.jpg)
bull Established in Philadelphia by the Quakers in 1813 ldquoFriends Hospitalrdquo (or Friends Asylum) became the first private institution in the United States dedicated solely to the care of those with mental illness [7]
55
bull Psychiatric hospitals that followed in the footsteps of Friends Asylum were the McLean Hospital (established in 1818 in Boston and now associated with Harvard) the Bloomingdale Asylum (established in 1821 in New York) and the Hartford Retreat (established in 1824 in Connecticut)mdashall modeled after the York Retreat and implementing moral treatment as the dominant therapy
56
bull It was not until modern times that religion and psychiatry began to part paths
bull This separation was encouraged by the psychiatrist Sigmund Freud
57
bull After being ldquointroducedrdquo to the neurotic and hysterical aspects of religion by the famous French neurologist Jean Charcot in the mid-1880s
bull Freud began to emphasize this in a widely read series of publications from 1907 through his death in 1939
58
bull These writings left a legacy that would influence the practice of psychiatrymdashespecially psychotherapymdashfor the rest of the century
bull and lead to a true schism between religion and mental health care
59
bull That schism was illustrated in 1993 by a systematic review of the religious content of DSM-III-R which found nearly one-quarter of all cases of mental illness being described using religious illustrations [12]
60
bull The conflict has continued to the present day Consider recent e-letters in response to two articles published in The Psychiatristthinspabout this topic [13 14] and an even more recent debate about the role of prayer in psychiatric practice [15]
61
bull This conflict has manifested in the clinical work of many mental health professionals who have generally ignored the religious resources of patients or viewed them as pathological
62
bull Consider that a recent national survey of US psychiatrists found that 56 said they never rarely or only sometimes inquire about religiousspiritual issues in patients with depression or anxiety [16]
63
![Page 56: Religion, Spirituality, and Health · Review Article •Religion, Spirituality, and Health: • The Research and Clinical Implications • - Koenig, Harold G. "Religion, spirituality,](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022062605/5fcb0bcd7925581572559072/html5/thumbnails/56.jpg)
bull Psychiatric hospitals that followed in the footsteps of Friends Asylum were the McLean Hospital (established in 1818 in Boston and now associated with Harvard) the Bloomingdale Asylum (established in 1821 in New York) and the Hartford Retreat (established in 1824 in Connecticut)mdashall modeled after the York Retreat and implementing moral treatment as the dominant therapy
56
bull It was not until modern times that religion and psychiatry began to part paths
bull This separation was encouraged by the psychiatrist Sigmund Freud
57
bull After being ldquointroducedrdquo to the neurotic and hysterical aspects of religion by the famous French neurologist Jean Charcot in the mid-1880s
bull Freud began to emphasize this in a widely read series of publications from 1907 through his death in 1939
58
bull These writings left a legacy that would influence the practice of psychiatrymdashespecially psychotherapymdashfor the rest of the century
bull and lead to a true schism between religion and mental health care
59
bull That schism was illustrated in 1993 by a systematic review of the religious content of DSM-III-R which found nearly one-quarter of all cases of mental illness being described using religious illustrations [12]
60
bull The conflict has continued to the present day Consider recent e-letters in response to two articles published in The Psychiatristthinspabout this topic [13 14] and an even more recent debate about the role of prayer in psychiatric practice [15]
61
bull This conflict has manifested in the clinical work of many mental health professionals who have generally ignored the religious resources of patients or viewed them as pathological
62
bull Consider that a recent national survey of US psychiatrists found that 56 said they never rarely or only sometimes inquire about religiousspiritual issues in patients with depression or anxiety [16]
63
![Page 57: Religion, Spirituality, and Health · Review Article •Religion, Spirituality, and Health: • The Research and Clinical Implications • - Koenig, Harold G. "Religion, spirituality,](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022062605/5fcb0bcd7925581572559072/html5/thumbnails/57.jpg)
bull It was not until modern times that religion and psychiatry began to part paths
bull This separation was encouraged by the psychiatrist Sigmund Freud
57
bull After being ldquointroducedrdquo to the neurotic and hysterical aspects of religion by the famous French neurologist Jean Charcot in the mid-1880s
bull Freud began to emphasize this in a widely read series of publications from 1907 through his death in 1939
58
bull These writings left a legacy that would influence the practice of psychiatrymdashespecially psychotherapymdashfor the rest of the century
bull and lead to a true schism between religion and mental health care
59
bull That schism was illustrated in 1993 by a systematic review of the religious content of DSM-III-R which found nearly one-quarter of all cases of mental illness being described using religious illustrations [12]
60
bull The conflict has continued to the present day Consider recent e-letters in response to two articles published in The Psychiatristthinspabout this topic [13 14] and an even more recent debate about the role of prayer in psychiatric practice [15]
61
bull This conflict has manifested in the clinical work of many mental health professionals who have generally ignored the religious resources of patients or viewed them as pathological
62
bull Consider that a recent national survey of US psychiatrists found that 56 said they never rarely or only sometimes inquire about religiousspiritual issues in patients with depression or anxiety [16]
63
![Page 58: Religion, Spirituality, and Health · Review Article •Religion, Spirituality, and Health: • The Research and Clinical Implications • - Koenig, Harold G. "Religion, spirituality,](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022062605/5fcb0bcd7925581572559072/html5/thumbnails/58.jpg)
bull After being ldquointroducedrdquo to the neurotic and hysterical aspects of religion by the famous French neurologist Jean Charcot in the mid-1880s
bull Freud began to emphasize this in a widely read series of publications from 1907 through his death in 1939
58
bull These writings left a legacy that would influence the practice of psychiatrymdashespecially psychotherapymdashfor the rest of the century
bull and lead to a true schism between religion and mental health care
59
bull That schism was illustrated in 1993 by a systematic review of the religious content of DSM-III-R which found nearly one-quarter of all cases of mental illness being described using religious illustrations [12]
60
bull The conflict has continued to the present day Consider recent e-letters in response to two articles published in The Psychiatristthinspabout this topic [13 14] and an even more recent debate about the role of prayer in psychiatric practice [15]
61
bull This conflict has manifested in the clinical work of many mental health professionals who have generally ignored the religious resources of patients or viewed them as pathological
62
bull Consider that a recent national survey of US psychiatrists found that 56 said they never rarely or only sometimes inquire about religiousspiritual issues in patients with depression or anxiety [16]
63
![Page 59: Religion, Spirituality, and Health · Review Article •Religion, Spirituality, and Health: • The Research and Clinical Implications • - Koenig, Harold G. "Religion, spirituality,](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022062605/5fcb0bcd7925581572559072/html5/thumbnails/59.jpg)
bull These writings left a legacy that would influence the practice of psychiatrymdashespecially psychotherapymdashfor the rest of the century
bull and lead to a true schism between religion and mental health care
59
bull That schism was illustrated in 1993 by a systematic review of the religious content of DSM-III-R which found nearly one-quarter of all cases of mental illness being described using religious illustrations [12]
60
bull The conflict has continued to the present day Consider recent e-letters in response to two articles published in The Psychiatristthinspabout this topic [13 14] and an even more recent debate about the role of prayer in psychiatric practice [15]
61
bull This conflict has manifested in the clinical work of many mental health professionals who have generally ignored the religious resources of patients or viewed them as pathological
62
bull Consider that a recent national survey of US psychiatrists found that 56 said they never rarely or only sometimes inquire about religiousspiritual issues in patients with depression or anxiety [16]
63
![Page 60: Religion, Spirituality, and Health · Review Article •Religion, Spirituality, and Health: • The Research and Clinical Implications • - Koenig, Harold G. "Religion, spirituality,](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022062605/5fcb0bcd7925581572559072/html5/thumbnails/60.jpg)
bull That schism was illustrated in 1993 by a systematic review of the religious content of DSM-III-R which found nearly one-quarter of all cases of mental illness being described using religious illustrations [12]
60
bull The conflict has continued to the present day Consider recent e-letters in response to two articles published in The Psychiatristthinspabout this topic [13 14] and an even more recent debate about the role of prayer in psychiatric practice [15]
61
bull This conflict has manifested in the clinical work of many mental health professionals who have generally ignored the religious resources of patients or viewed them as pathological
62
bull Consider that a recent national survey of US psychiatrists found that 56 said they never rarely or only sometimes inquire about religiousspiritual issues in patients with depression or anxiety [16]
63
![Page 61: Religion, Spirituality, and Health · Review Article •Religion, Spirituality, and Health: • The Research and Clinical Implications • - Koenig, Harold G. "Religion, spirituality,](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022062605/5fcb0bcd7925581572559072/html5/thumbnails/61.jpg)
bull The conflict has continued to the present day Consider recent e-letters in response to two articles published in The Psychiatristthinspabout this topic [13 14] and an even more recent debate about the role of prayer in psychiatric practice [15]
61
bull This conflict has manifested in the clinical work of many mental health professionals who have generally ignored the religious resources of patients or viewed them as pathological
62
bull Consider that a recent national survey of US psychiatrists found that 56 said they never rarely or only sometimes inquire about religiousspiritual issues in patients with depression or anxiety [16]
63
![Page 62: Religion, Spirituality, and Health · Review Article •Religion, Spirituality, and Health: • The Research and Clinical Implications • - Koenig, Harold G. "Religion, spirituality,](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022062605/5fcb0bcd7925581572559072/html5/thumbnails/62.jpg)
bull This conflict has manifested in the clinical work of many mental health professionals who have generally ignored the religious resources of patients or viewed them as pathological
62
bull Consider that a recent national survey of US psychiatrists found that 56 said they never rarely or only sometimes inquire about religiousspiritual issues in patients with depression or anxiety [16]
63
![Page 63: Religion, Spirituality, and Health · Review Article •Religion, Spirituality, and Health: • The Research and Clinical Implications • - Koenig, Harold G. "Religion, spirituality,](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022062605/5fcb0bcd7925581572559072/html5/thumbnails/63.jpg)
bull Consider that a recent national survey of US psychiatrists found that 56 said they never rarely or only sometimes inquire about religiousspiritual issues in patients with depression or anxiety [16]
63