Tuesday, August 20, 2019

Private prayer may boost memory for adults over 50

A bearded man clasps his hands together in prayer in black and white.

People over 50 who attend religious services and pray privately may notice better memory performance, researchers report.

According to the study’s findings, frequent religious service attendance and private prayer was linked to stronger cognitive health among blacks, Hispanics, and whites.

Previous research has shown religious involvement benefits physical and mental health of older minority adults.

Zarina Kraal, a psychology doctoral candidate at the University of Michigan and the study’s lead author, tested whether the findings could extend to cognitive health.

The researchers used six years of data from the University of Michigan Health and Retirement Study, which includes responses from more than 16,000 people over age 50. They asked about religious attendance and prayer, and then tested people’s memory skills.

Participants—who disclosed their ethnicity, physical health, and depressive symptoms—heard 10 words and had to recall them immediately, and then again five minutes later.

Older black and Hispanic adults reported more religious involvement than their white counterparts. The effects of prayer and religious attendance on memory were equivalent between black and white older adults, as well as Hispanic and white older adults, Kraal says.

She also notes that the social aspects of religious service attendance may underlie its positive association with memory in older adults.

Attending religious services may promote social engagement with religious peers, and social engagement has been positively associated with cognitive outcomes

“Attending religious services may promote social engagement with religious peers, and social engagement has been positively associated with cognitive outcomes,” Kraal says.

Separate from social benefits, religious attendance may be linked to better cognitive health through stimulating cognitive activities unique to religious services, such as discussing sermons or applying scriptural study.

Additionally, the potential cognitive demands of prayer may explain its positive association with memory, Kraal says. For instance, memory may be required to recall who to pray for and reasons for prayer. Prayer may be beneficial for memory via its relaxation and stress reduction effects.

The findings appear in the journal Research on Aging.

Source: University of Michigan

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