‘Regardless of analytic methods used, more recent frequent religious service attendance was consistently associated with significantly lower risk of depression.’ https://t.co/c6RIWqzLMg
@MattKoffler @catlovingcommie @HelionCobra98 You also have to factor in the decline in religion as well, I include this because one of the most important fundamentals for many religions is no divorce. https://t.co/Ub87fE0rPi
@Chrondike @catlovingcommie @HelionCobra98 You also have to factor in the decline in religion as well, I include this because one of the most important fundamentals for many religions is no divorce. https://t.co/Ub87fE0ZEQ
- lower depression rates among women https://t.co/owfelB4lVE
@spawneedave @93Purp @ryanburge @herandrews Correlation is almost always the clue that points us to causation. One piece of evidence among many: https://t.co/Udhzv0Jnzw
@THE_GUTTER420 @Tobiraartist That's only a partial explanation (just like religion is only a partial explanation), but the fact matter is that depression is a result of our free time and free mind. I wouldn't trade it, but it's not for everyone. Church goe
@josephtoofine @Remostikal @drbanj This one counters the thoughts expressed in this thread https://t.co/MwmdPKudCZ
@KoloKennethK @rayyshie Suicide is really difficult to study, but this well done study that examined religious participation and mental health suggests it can be partly protective. https://t.co/P5B7PPIn4V
Big research study: Regularly attending religious services decreases the risk of developing #depression. https://t.co/ZiXTONR67r