학술논문

The Relationship between Religiosity and Drug Use among "At Risk" Women
Document Type
research-article
Source
Journal of Religion and Health, 2006 Apr 01. 45(1), 40-56.
Subject
religiosity
drug use
substance use
women
Religiosity
Oral sex
Human sexual behavior
Family members
Substance abuse
Illicit drugs
Drug abuse
Drug design
Drug dependence
Self esteem
Language
English
ISSN
00224197
15736571
Abstract
This study focuses on the interplay between religiosity and drug use in a sample of 250 adult women from the Atlanta, Georgia metropolitan area who were interviewed between August 1997 and August 2000. The research addresses two principal questions: (1) Is there a relationship between the level of religiosity and the amount of illegal drug use reported? (2) If so, is this relationship maintained in multivariate analysis when the eects of other potentially relevant factors like demographic characteristics, childhood maltreatment experiences, psychosocial traits, and substance user-related measures are taken into account? We found that religiosity is related to the amount of drugs women used. Four variables were retained in the final multivariate drug use prediction model: religiosity, coping with everyday stresses, number of family members who are substance abusers, and amount of oral sex. Greater amounts of drugs were used by women who were less religious, less capable of coping with stress, had more drug-abusing family members, and reported having more oral sex. Together, these items explained nearly one-fifth of the variance in the dependent variable. The implications for substance abuse prevention and intervention eorts are discussed.