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“Heart Trouble” and Religious Involvement among Older White Men and Women

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Abstract

Objective Few studies examine how older adults’ health status affects spiritual and religious involvement. This study examined the effects of gender and poor cardiac health on older adults’ ends, means, and quest religious motivations and frequency of private devotion. Method Longitudinal data (12 months between the T1 and T2 interviews) with 182 older adults sampled from a Northeast city were used to examine in a multivariate analysis of covariance whether gender and the existence of cardiac health problems at T1 affected older adults’ spiritual and religious involvement at T2. Findings A gender and cardiac health condition interaction showed older men with heart trouble had more changes in religious involvement—they engaged in more religious doubt, prayed less, and were not as intrinsically oriented at T2. Discussion The findings strongly suggest that older men with heart trouble may maintain a masculine style and shun seeking divine help.

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Correspondence to Edward H. Thompson Jr..

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Thompson, E.H., Killgore, L. & Connors, H. “Heart Trouble” and Religious Involvement among Older White Men and Women. J Relig Health 48, 317–331 (2009). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10943-008-9202-1

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