Religious factors associated with alcohol involvement: results from the Mauritian Joint Child Health Project
- PMID: 24332801
- PMCID: PMC3919702
- DOI: 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2013.10.028
Religious factors associated with alcohol involvement: results from the Mauritian Joint Child Health Project
Abstract
Background: The purpose of this study was to examine religious factors associated with alcohol involvement in Mauritius. The three main religions on the island, Hinduism, Catholicism, and Islam, promote different views of the appropriate use of alcohol. Based on reference group theory, we hypothesized that both the content of a religion's alcohol norms and an individual's religious commitment would relate to alcohol use behavior.
Methods: Participants were from the Joint Child Health Project, a longitudinal study that has followed a birth cohort of 1.795 individuals since 1972 when they were 3 years old. All available participants (67%; 55% male) were assessed in mid-adulthood on religious variables, lifetime drinking, and lifetime alcohol use disorders.
Results: Across religions, individuals who viewed their religion as promoting abstinence were less likely to be drinkers. Religious commitment was associated with reduced probability of drinking only in those who viewed their religion as promoting abstinence. Among drinkers, abstention norms and religious commitment were not associated with lower likelihood of alcohol use disorders. In Catholics who viewed their religion as promoting abstinence and still were drinkers, high religious commitment was associated with increased risk for alcohol use disorders.
Conclusions: Predictions based on reference group theory were largely supported, with religious norms and commitment differentially related to alcohol use and problems both across religions and among individuals within religions. Findings highlight the importance of examining multiple aspects of religion to better understand the relationship of religion with alcohol behaviors.
Keywords: Alcohol abstinence; Alcohol use disorders; Catholic; Hindu; Muslim; Religion.
Copyright © 2013 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.
Conflict of interest statement
No conflict declared.
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