Religiosity and Self-Rated Health as Predictors of Well-Being and Depression in Older Adults
Nicholas Prefontaine, Andrew Revell

TL;DR
This study explores how religiosity and self-rated health affect well-being and depression in older adults, finding that religiosity is linked to better mental health outcomes.
Contribution
The study contributes by analyzing the predictive role of religiosity and self-rated health in older adults' well-being and depression.
Findings
Religiosity positively predicts life satisfaction, self-esteem, and hope/optimism in older adults.
Religiosity may enhance well-being by providing meaning and purpose.
Self-rated health relationships were also explored, though specific findings were not detailed.
Abstract
Depression and the well-being of older adults is crucial to public health, as this population faces heightened vulnerability to mental health challenges (Wang et al., 2022). In this present study, the role of religion and self-rated health (SRH) concerning depression and subjective well-being (SWB) were examined. Specifically, the objective of this examination was to identify the predictive nature of religiosity and SRH in a cohort of older adults aged 65 and older (M = 74) as a secondary data analysis. Data were drawn from the Religion, Aging, and Health Survey (RAHS; Krause, 2018), which included 1,500 participants, all Christian (N = 1,500), predominantly White (n = 748) and African American (n = 752), sampled through stratified sampling methods. Measures included Private Religious Practices, Self-Rated Health, and the Center for Epidemiological Studies Depression Inventory (CESD).…
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Taxonomy
TopicsReligion, Spirituality, and Psychology · Optimism, Hope, and Well-being · Dietary Effects on Health
