Because the media are reporting results of a recent study that shows,
quoting CNN:

|A new study shows that attending religious services regularly can 
|mean a more optimistic, less depressed, and less cynical outlook on life.
http://religion.blogs.cnn.com/2011/11/10/study-links-regular-religious-service-attendance-outlook-on-life/

See also this article with the headline "Women Who Attend Church
Are More Optimistic";
http://www.urbanchristiannews.com/ucn/2011/11/study-women-who-attend-church-are-more-optimistic.html

Now, to be fair, several of the news stories provide the qualification
that this study (which is based on the Women's Health Initiative; see:
http://www.whi.org/  and http://www.nhlbi.nih.gov/whi/os.htm )
is merely correlational and that there is only a link, not a causal
relationship between church attendance and optimism etc. 

One odd point is that the news stories say that the study was
published in the "Journal of Religion and Health" (a Springer pub)
but examination of the Springer website does not appear to
contain it.  In their "Online First" pre-publication of article, the
most recent article is from October; see:
http://ezproxy.library.nyu.edu:2421/content/0022-4197/preprint/?sort=p_OnlineDate&sortorder=desc&o=10
So I wonder how this study got released to the media so fast.

-Mike Palij
New York University
[email protected]









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