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Gerontologist ; 2024 Aug 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39093686

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: The central aim of the present study was to model developmental trends in communal and independent religious practices, spirituality, positive and negative religious/spiritual coping, as well as their confluence, across ages 45 to 80. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: Participants derived from the Notre Dame Study of Health & Well-being (NDHWB), a longitudinal study spanning 10 years in an age-heterogenous sample. Using two-level multilevel models, we estimated no change, linear change, quadratic change, and cubic change functions across ages 45 to 80 in each construct. Cohort differences were also tested. RESULTS: Communal and independent practices, spirituality, negative religious/spiritual coping, as well as composite religiosity/spirituality, followed cubic trajectories across mid- to later life. Communal religious practices peaked twice: once at 45 and again around age 70. Independent practices, in contrast, peaked at age 45 and then declined in a stage-like manner until age 80. Spirituality reached its nadir around age 50 and peaked in the early 70s; the reverse was true for negative religious/spiritual coping. The change trajectory in composite religiosity/spirituality most resembled that of independent religious practices. Finally, positive religious/spiritual coping followed a linear trajectory, but a cohort difference precluded its interpretation as developmental change. DISCUSSION AND IMPLICATIONS: Individuals appear to engage with their faith in different ways as they age, meaning extant conclusions about age-related differences and change in global R/S may be distorted.

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