Something a bit different this week from the LA Times of June 29:
Against a grim backdrop of rising suicide rates among American
women, new research has revealed a blinding shaft of light: One group of
women — practicing Catholics — appears to have bucked the
national trend toward despair and self-harm.
Compared with women who never participated in religious
services, women who attended any religious service once a week or more were
five times less likely to commit suicide between 1996 and 2010, says a study published Wednesday
by Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA) Psychiatry.
It’s not clear how widely the findings can be applied to a
diverse population of American women. In a study population made up of nurses
and dominated by women who identified themselves as either Catholic or
Protestant, the suicide rate observed was about half that for U.S. women as a
whole. Of 89,708 participants aged 30 to 55, 36 committed suicide at some point
over 15 years.
The women’s church attendance was not the only factor; which
church they attended mattered as well. Protestant women who worshiped
weekly at church were far less likely to take their own lives than were women
who seldom or never attended services. But these same Protestant women were
still seven times more likely to die by their own hand than were their devout
Catholic sisters.
Among especially devout Catholic women — those in the pews more
than once a week — suicides were a vanishing phenomenon. Among the 6,999
Catholic women who said they attended mass more than once a week, there was not
a single suicide.
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