Research into a relation between religion and psychiatric disorder
In this article two Dutch studies into the relation between religion and psychiatric disorder are compared. In the first study the relation is explored between the church communion of the `Gereformeerde Gemeenten' and major depressive disorder resp. reactive psychosis. Aiming this communion the author speaks in his conclusion of `a risk factor for mental health'. The method of research used by the author, the case control study, has a lot of bottlenecks, which he leaves unsolved. In the other study the bottlenecks mentioned above are obviated. Here a relation is assessed between churchmembership and the (proportional) amount of requests for psychiatric hospitalisation. This relation does not immediately refer to the view of live in itself but to a sociological characteristic of the regarding religious group, the `sociocultural integration'.
The conclusion is that
_ for this purpose, a prevalence study is to be preferred above a case control study;
_ if a correlation is proved reliably, other characteristics (i.e. sociological or biological) can be responsable too.