Donna Danna (4 Apr 2006)
"Study: Go To Church, Live 3.1 Yrs. Longer"


(Better yet, if you're saved, you have eternal life.)

Study: Go To Church, Live 3.1 Yrs. Longer

Regular religious attendance aids longevity at cost lower than anti-cholesterol medicine

http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=49582

If you're planning on a church funeral when you die, a new study suggests you can delay it by up to 3.1 years if you attend church regularly as opposed to waiting for a priest or pastor to say final words over your casket.

Daniel Hall, a Pittsburgh medical doctor and Episcopal priest, has published the results of a "meta-analysis" – a study of previous studies – in the March-April issue of the Journal of the American Board of Family Medicine that "demonstrates a robust but small association" between weekly attendance at religious services and a longer life.

While Hall found going to church regularly accounted for only 2 to 3 extra "life-years," compared to 3 to 5 life-years for physical exercise and 2.5 to 3.5 life-years for statin-type agents used to treat high chloresterol, religious activity proved to be a cheaper way to "buy" the extra years than using prescription drugs.

Using "admittedly limited assumptions" for his "thought experiment," Hall calculated life expectancy tables using the methodology of the National Center for Health Statistics and analyzed his data to account for different "modalities" – church attendance, exercise and prescription drugs.

Using the annual cost of membership at the local gym ($500) as the cost for exercise, the average yearly household contribution to religious institutions ($1336) by the average household size (2.59) as the cost of attending church and the average yearly cost for statin-type therapy ($836) as the cost for prescription drug treatment, Hall determined how much each additional year of life would cost for each of the lifestyle choices.

The cost per life-year gained was between $2,000 and $6,000 for regular exercise, $3,000 and $10,000 for regular religious attendance, and between $4,000 and $14,000 for statin-type agents. The higher figure for religious attendance assumed the giving of the Old Testament 10 percent tithe which is much higher than the average for religious giving.

Church attendance, Hall concluded, is not a medical therapy but it is comparable to commonly recommended therapies in its effects and is more cost-effective than a regime of cholesterol-lowering drugs.

"There is something about being knit into the type of community that religious communities embody that has a way of mediating a positive health effect," Hall told LiveScience. Perhaps, it "can then decrease your level of stress in life or increase your ability to cope with stress."

"This analysis should not be interpreted to mean that health care payers should start covering the annual tithe of religious patients," Hall writes. "And it is not clear that the observed reduction in mortality would accrue due to religious attendance. From a theological perspective such instrumental use of religion is idolatrous. From a methodological perspective, it is not at all clear that 'instrumental faith' is sufficiently genuine to accrue the observed reduction in mortality."

"Being in a religious community helps you make meaning out of your life," Hall said.

Churchgoing Correlated To Longevity

Take two prayers and call me in the morning: Churchgoers live longer, according to Dr. Daniel Hall, a University of Pittsburgh Medical Center physician who analyzed actuarial death rates and found that weekly worship service attendance could add up to three years to a person's life.

Previous studies also support the link between longevity and religion. Among them, a 1997 study by Duke University Medical Center of 1,700 older adults found that religious observance enhanced immune systems and lowered blood pressure. Another Duke study two years later found that weekly churchgoers were 46 percent less likely to die over a six-year period than people who did not attend.
 
The effect was so strong that it was equal to that of not smoking cigarettes, Duke psychiatrist Dr. Harold Koenig said at the time. In addition, University of Colorado sociologists found that regular churchgoers live longer than those who don't attend -- by as much as seven years.
 
FULL STORY at
http://www.washtimes.com/national/20060403-103809-9183r.htm