Here is a published scientific study where the (scientific) research links 
religion and health benefits.  In reviewing this paper please note the 
cross-reference to many papers that have arrived at similar conclusions.

The paper appeared in: The Journals of Gerontology Series A: Biological 
Sciences and Medical Sciences 63:480-486 (2008).  © 2008 The Gerontological 
Society of America 
 
The abstract of the paper is below:
 
Church Attendance Mediates the Association Between Depressive Symptoms and 
Cognitive Functioning Among Older Mexican Americans.
Carlos A. Reyes-Ortiz, Ivonne M. Berges, Mukaila A. Raji, Harold G. Koenig, 
Yong-Fang Kuo and Kyriakos S. Markides. 
 
Background. The objective of this study was to examine how the effect of 
depressive symptoms on cognitive function is modified by church attendance. 
 
Methods. We used a sample of 2759 older Mexican Americans. Cognitive function 
was assessed using the Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE) at baseline, 2, 5, 
7, and 11 years of follow-up. Church attendance was dichotomized as frequent 
attendance (e.g., going to church at least once a month) versus infrequent 
attendance (e.g., never or several times a year). Depressive symptoms were 
assessed by the Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale (CES-D; score 
16 vs <16). General linear mixed models with time-dependent covariates were 
used to explore cognitive change at follow-up. 
 
Results. In unadjusted models, infrequent church attendees had a greater 
decline in MMSE scores (drop of 0.151 points more each year, standard error 
[SE] = 0.02, p <.001) compared to frequent church attendees; participants 
having CES-D scores 16 also had greater declines in MMSE scores (drop of 0.132 
points more each year, SE = 0.03, p <.001) compared to participants with CES-D 
score <16 at follow-up. In fully adjusted models, a significant Church 
attendance x CES-D x Time interaction (p =.001) indicated that, among 
participants with CES-D scores 16, infrequent church attendees had greater 
decline in MMSE scores (drop of 0.236 points more each year, SE = 0.05, p 
<.001) compared to frequent church attendees at follow-up. 
 
Conclusion. Church attendance appears to be beneficial for maintaining 
cognitive function of older persons. Church attendance moderates the impact of 
clinically relevant depressive symptoms on subsequent cognitive function. 
 
The link is to the entire paper.
http://biomed.gerontologyjournals.org/cgi/content/full/63/5/480
 
Regards, GL



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