Do religious and spiritual identity confer risk for hypertension via psychosocial and lifestyle factors?

  • PubMed
  • May 4, 2025
  • 0 Comments

Do religious and spiritual identity confer risk for hypertension via psychosocial and lifestyle factors?

Autor: McIntosh, Roger C.; Ironson, Gail; Krause, Neal

Publication year: 2020

Journal of health psychology

issn:1461-7277 1359-1053

doi: 10.1177/1359105317748733


Abstract:

The total and indirect effect of hostility on systolic and diastolic blood pressure was compared as a function of religious and spirituality identity in a nationally representative sample of 2971 adults aged 46.44 years. Structural equation modeling uncovered an indirect path from hostility to diastolic blood pressure via unhealthy behaviors and hostility to unhealthy behaviors via social isolation. Compared to a non-religious/non-spiritual reference group, the effect for unhealthy behaviors on diastolic blood pressure was greater for those endorsing some form of religious identity. However, the direction of the effect for hostility on social isolation and social isolation on unhealthy behaviors was reversed in those endorsing spiritual and religious identity.

Language: eng

Rights:

Pmid: 29292660

Tags: Humans; Female; Male; Middle Aged; *Life Style; Blood Pressure; *Religion; *Spirituality; blood pressure; health/lifestyle behaviors; hostility; Hypertension/*psychology; religion/spirituality; social isolation; Social Isolation

Link: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/29292660/

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