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RESEARCH

God-Mediated Control and Change in Self-Rated Health

Pages 267-287 | Published online: 05 Oct 2010
 

Abstract

The purpose of this study was to see if feelings of God-mediated control are associated with change in self-rated health over time. In the process, an effort was made to see if a sense of meaning in life and optimism mediated the relationship between God-mediated control and change in health. The following hypothesized relationships were contained in the conceptual model that was developed to evaluate these issues: (a) People who go to church more often tend to have stronger God-mediated control beliefs than individuals who do not attend worship services as often; (b) people with a strong sense of God-mediated control are more likely to find a sense of meaning in life and be more optimistic than individuals who do not have a strong sense of God-mediated control; (c) people who are optimistic and who have a strong sense of meaning in life will rate their health more favorably over time than individuals who are not optimistic, as well as individuals who have not found a sense of meaning in life. Data from a longitudinal nationwide survey of older adults provided support for each of these hypotheses.

Notes

aThis item is scored in the following manner: 1 (never), 2 (less than once a year), 3 (about once or twice a year), 4 (several times a year), 5 (about once a month), 6 (2–3 times a month), 7 (nearly every week), 8 (every week), 9 (several times a week).

bThese items are scored in the following manner: 1 (disagree strongly), 2 (disagree), 3 (agree), 4 (agree strongly).

cThis item is scored in the following manner: 1 (poor), 2 (fair), 3 (good), 4 (excellent).

dThis item is scored in the following manner: 1 (not at all satisfied), 2 (not very satisfied), 3 (somewhat satisfied), 4 (very satisfied), 5 (completely satisfied).

eThis item is scored in the following manner: 1 (worse), 2 (about the same), 3 (better).

aFactor loadings are from the completely standardized solution. The first-listed item for each latent construct was fixed at 1.0 in the unstandardized solution.

bMeasurement error terms are from the completely standardized solution. All factor loadings and measurement error terms are significant at the .001 level.

cItem content is paraphrased for the purpose of identification. See for the complete text of each indicator.

dThe factor loadings and measurement error terms were constrained to be equivalent in the unstandardized solution for the identical Wave 5 and Wave 6 self-rated health measures.

aStandardized regression coefficient. These estimates reflect direct effects only.

bMetric (unstandardized) coefficient.

*p < .05.

**p < .01.

***p < .001.

aAll coefficients in the table are standardized coefficients.

*p < .05.

**p < .01.

***p < .001.

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