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The Protective Effects of Religious Beliefs on Behavioral Health Factors Among Low Income African American Adolescents in Chicago
Authors:Dong Ha Kim  Justin Harty  Lois Takahashi  Dexter R. Voisin
Affiliation:1.Department of Social Welfare,Chungwoon University,Hongseong,Republic of Korea;2.School of Social Service Administration,The University of Chicago,Chicago,USA;3.Price School of Public Policy,University of Southern California,1800 I Sacramento,USA;4.School of Social Service Administration,The University of Chicago,Chicago,USA
Abstract:Religious involvement has long been argued to have protective effects for negative behavioral health outcomes for vulnerable youth. This study builds on the existing resilience literature and need for more studies that examine protective factors associated with behavioral health. A sample of 638 low-income African American adolescents in Chicago to examine within group variations of the influence of religious involvement on delinquency, school engagement, substance use and sexual risk behaviors, and whether such relationships differ by gender, sexual orientation, and socioeconomic status. Logistic regression findings documented that greater religious involvement was protective with regards to lower rates of delinquency, drug use, risky sexual behaviors and higher rates of school engagement, and that gender, sexual orientation and socioeconomic status varied for several of these relationships. Overall findings are discussed with regards to future research.
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