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Very religious people rate higher – compared to the moderately religious and nonreligious – on a Gallup "well being" survey released Thursday.
According to the survey, very religious people from all religious groups surveyed higher than their nonreligious brethren. Very religious Jews scored highest on the survey with a score of 72.4. Very religious Mormons finished a close second with 71.5.
By comparison, moderately and non religious Jews scored in the 68 percentile, while moderately and non religious Mormons scored in the 63 percentile.
Gallup defines well being based on a number of emotional and physical health indexes in their Well-Being Index.
"The findings confirm that the strong positive relationship between religiosity and wellbeing that Gallup previously demonstrated holds regardless of faith," stated a release by researchers Frank Newport, Dan Witters and Sangeeta Agrawal.
Though the difference from the top was only about 7 points, those who identified as not religious, atheist or agnostic finished at the bottom of the scale with 65.8 points.
"The relationship appears to be largely independent of the proportions of very religious, moderately religious, and nonreligious in each religious group, and it is more closely aligned with the faith itself," the release stated.
An example: while Muslims have a lower level of well being than Jews, the gap between the most and least religious constituencies is roughly the same.
The results of the survey also show that Mormons are by far the most religious group surveyed.
Seventy-three percent of Mormons identified as very religious, compared to 50 percent of Protestants, 46 percent of Muslims and 43 percent of Roman Catholics.
In comparison, people from other non-Christian religions and Jews were predominantly nonreligious with 43.7 and 53.5 percent respectively identifying as such.
The survey was compiled from 676,000 interviews and has an error range of plus or minus less than one percent. These interviews were conducted from January 2010 to December 2011.
The data is part of a multipart Gallup series on "religiosity and wellbeing in America."
According to the survey, very religious people from all religious groups surveyed higher than their nonreligious brethren. Very religious Jews scored highest on the survey with a score of 72.4. Very religious Mormons finished a close second with 71.5.
By comparison, moderately and non religious Jews scored in the 68 percentile, while moderately and non religious Mormons scored in the 63 percentile.
Gallup defines well being based on a number of emotional and physical health indexes in their Well-Being Index.
"The findings confirm that the strong positive relationship between religiosity and wellbeing that Gallup previously demonstrated holds regardless of faith," stated a release by researchers Frank Newport, Dan Witters and Sangeeta Agrawal.
Though the difference from the top was only about 7 points, those who identified as not religious, atheist or agnostic finished at the bottom of the scale with 65.8 points.
"The relationship appears to be largely independent of the proportions of very religious, moderately religious, and nonreligious in each religious group, and it is more closely aligned with the faith itself," the release stated.
An example: while Muslims have a lower level of well being than Jews, the gap between the most and least religious constituencies is roughly the same.
The results of the survey also show that Mormons are by far the most religious group surveyed.
Seventy-three percent of Mormons identified as very religious, compared to 50 percent of Protestants, 46 percent of Muslims and 43 percent of Roman Catholics.
In comparison, people from other non-Christian religions and Jews were predominantly nonreligious with 43.7 and 53.5 percent respectively identifying as such.
The survey was compiled from 676,000 interviews and has an error range of plus or minus less than one percent. These interviews were conducted from January 2010 to December 2011.
The data is part of a multipart Gallup series on "religiosity and wellbeing in America."
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