A meta-analytic approach to examine the relationship between religion/spirituality and mental health in cancer

Authors

John A. Salsman

James E. Pustejovsky

Heather S. Jim

Alexis R. Munoz

Thomas V. Merluzzi

Logan George

Crystal L. Park

Suzanne C. Danhauer

Allen C. Sherman

Mallory A. Snyder

George Fitchett

Published

August 10, 2015

Religion and spirituality (R/S) are patient-centered factors and often are resources for managing the emotional sequelae of the cancer experience. Studies investigating the correlation between R/S (eg, beliefs, experiences, coping) and mental health (eg, depression, anxiety, well being) in cancer have used very heterogeneous measures and have produced correspondingly inconsistent results. A meaningful synthesis of these findings has been lacking; thus, the objective of this review was to conduct a meta-analysis of the research on R/S and mental health. Four electronic databases were systematically reviewed, and 2073 abstracts met initial selection criteria. Reviewer pairs applied standardized coding schemes to extract indices of the correlation between R/S and mental health. In total, 617 effect sizes from 148 eligible studies were synthesized using meta-analytic generalized estimating equations, and subgroup analyses were performed to examine moderators of effects. The estimated mean correlation (Fisher z) was 0.19 (95% confidence interval [CI], 0.16-0.23), which varied as a function of R/S dimensions: affective R/S (z=0.38; 95% CI, 0.33-0.43), behavioral R/S (z=0.03; 95% CI, 20.02-0.08), cognitive R/S (z=0.10; 95% CI, 0.06-0.14), and ‘other’ R/S (z=0.08; 95% CI, 0.03-0.13). Aggregate, study-level demographic and clinical factors were not predictive of the relation between R/S and mental health. There was little indication of publication or reporting biases. The correlation between R/S and mental health generally was positive. The strength of that correlation was modest and varied as a function of the R/S dimensions and mental health domains assessed. The identification of optimal R/S measures and more sophisticated methodological approaches are needed to advance research.

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Citation

BibTeX citation:
@article{salsman2015,
  author = {Salsman, John A. and Pustejovsky, James E. and Jim, Heather
    S. and Munoz, Alexis R. and Merluzzi, Thomas V. and George, Logan
    and Park, Crystal L. and Danhauer, Suzanne C. and Sherman, Allen C.
    and Snyder, Mallory A. and Fitchett, George},
  title = {A Meta-Analytic Approach to Examine the Relationship Between
    Religion/Spirituality and Mental Health in Cancer},
  journal = {Cancer},
  volume = {121},
  number = {21},
  pages = {3769-3778},
  date = {2015-08-10},
  url = {http://doi.org/10.1002/cncr.29350},
  doi = {10.1016/j.jsp.2018.02.003},
  langid = {en}
}
For attribution, please cite this work as:
Salsman, J. A., Pustejovsky, J. E., Jim, H. S., Munoz, A. R., Merluzzi, T. V., George, L., Park, C. L., Danhauer, S. C., Sherman, A. C., Snyder, M. A., & Fitchett, G. (2015). A meta-analytic approach to examine the relationship between religion/spirituality and mental health in cancer. Cancer, 121(21), 3769–3778. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jsp.2018.02.003