In a November 2nd Psychiatric News article, Joan Arehart-Treichel writes:
"Although more clinicians are considering patients' religion and spirituality in their initial evaluation than in the past, these issues may need to be revisited at various times during psychiatric treatment."
"A study in the September Canadian Journal of Psychiatry adds a new twist to the question of whether religiousness affects people's emotional states. It has linked religiousness with lower rates of both depression and anxiety, yet has found that spirituality — the search for a meaning to life — is associated with higher rates of both maladies."
Thursday, November 09, 2006
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