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Background: An inverse relationship between religiosity and adolescent health-related behaviour has been repeatedly documented, but evidence regarding gender is scarce. The aim of this study was to assess the association between a wide range of adolescent health-related behaviours and religiosity as well as gender differences in these associations.
Methods: Data were collected in 2010 in Slovakia on 3674 adolescents, with mean age of 14.9 years (response: 79.5%). ORs for levels of religiosity, measured by religious attendance and religious salience, were calculated for 15 behaviours, such as the use of various substances, nutritional behaviour and violent behaviour. The authors then assessed the interactions of religiosity and gender on these behaviours.
Results: Religiosity was inversely associated with health-risk behaviour in smoking, drunkenness, cannabis use, having breakfast, soft drinks consumption, screen-based activities and sexual intercourse among both genders and in truancy among girls only. This association was significantly stronger among girls than among boys in smoking, drunkenness and cannabis use. Religiosity was unrelated to the consumption of fruits, vegetables and sweets, physical inactivity, tooth brushing, fighting and bullying others in both genders.
Conclusions: An inverse relationship between religiosity and health-risk behaviour was found in several behaviours (especially use of substances) but not in other behaviours (violent behaviours in particular). Gender seems to moderate this relationship in smoking, drunkenness and cannabis use. Further research is needed on the mechanisms leading to an association between religiosity and health behaviour and on the strength of this association in other countries and cultures.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/jech-2011-200914 | DOI Listing |
BMC Palliat Care
September 2025
Medical School, Internal Medicine Department, Geriatrics Division, São Paulo State University (UNESP), Av. Prof. Mario Rubens Guimaraes Montenegro, Botucatu, SN, 18618-687, Brazil.
Background/aims: The extent to which low- and middle-income countries have implemented Advance Care Planning (ACP) and Advance Directives (AD) remains unclear. We aimed to map the current status of ACP/AD in Latin America.
Methods: This cross-sectional, mixed-methods survey of ACP/AD in LA comprised interviews with 18 key informants from 18 out of 20 countries, most of whom were appointed by national Palliative Care Associations.
Aging Ment Health
September 2025
Human Development & Family Science, Oklahoma State University, Stillwater, OK, USA.
Background And Objectives: The current study's model, derived from The Developmental Model of Adaptation, investigated the associations of past influences, closeness to parents, and two assessments of current influences (religiosity and social support) on the wellbeing (depressive symptomatology and life satisfaction) of very old adults.
Research Design And Methods: Cross-sectional data came from a convenience sample of 154 cognitively intact, community-dwelling, Oklahoma centenarians. SPSS was employed to assess descriptive statistics and associations among all constructs; M was employed to test a mediational path model linking closeness to parents on life satisfaction and depressive symptomatology through religiosity and social support.
A religious lifestyle can be a powerful factor in predicting and promoting healthy functioning following trauma exposure. Previous research has demonstrated that higher levels of religiosity significantly predict posttraumatic growth following exposure to trauma. Firefighters are a population associated with routine exposure to potentially traumatic events, as well as high levels of occupational stress.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Ment Health Syst
August 2025
NYU Rory Meyers College of Nursing, 433 1st Avenue, New York, NY, 10010, United States.
Background: Over 14 million adolescents have a diagnosable mental, behavioral, or emotional disorder yet only 20% receive adequate mental health services. There is a critical need to identify accessible and effective pathways to treatment. School based mental health services (SBMHS) are an optimal setting for timely identification, effective management, and convenient delivery of evidence-based mental health care.
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