It seems prayer really may have the power to heal.
Moderate levels of prayer and other types of religious coping may help combat depression among spouses of people with lung cancer, says a study in the November-December issue of Psychosomatics.
Using religion to cope
The study included 156 spouses of people with various stages of lung cancer.
The spouses were 26 to 85 years old (mean age 63.9 years), and 78 percent of
them were women.
Researchers assessed the spouses' levels of religious coping and depression, along with their sense of control over events and level of social support.
The researchers define religious coping as a person's use of religious beliefs or practices to manage stressful life events.
Religious coping includes prayer, drawing comfort from faith, and having support from church members.
The study found that spouses who used moderate levels of religious coping were less depressed than spouses who used lower or higher levels of religious coping.
Turning to religion in need
The connection between depression and high levels of religious coping may
reflect an over-reliance on less adaptive religious coping strategies and
neglect of other important coping strategies, the researchers say.
They also say that spouses who feel the most desperate may be more likely to turn to religion for comfort. That means those people may already be depressed before they begin using religious coping.