Religious Involvement and Substance Use Among Urban Mothers
ORCID
Burdette: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7013-2066; Haynes: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1408-9291
MSU Affiliation
College of Arts and Sciences; Department of Sociology
Creation Date
2026-06-01
Abstract
Although numerous cross-sectional studies suggest that religious involvement is associated with lower rates of substance use, it is unclear whether these protective effects can be observed over time with more rigorous longitudinal designs. In this study, we use longitudinal data from the U.S. Fragile Families and Child Wellbeing Study (n = 3,176) to test whether indicators of religious involvement are protective against illicit drug use and prescription drug misuse among mothers who are primarily single and of low socioeconomic status. Our results show that religious involvement at baseline is unrelated to prescription drug misuse at follow-up. We also find that religious attendance at baseline reduces the odds of illicit drug use at follow-up. Respondents who increased their level of religious attendance over the study period also tended to exhibit a concurrent reduction in the odds of illicit drug use. Although prior substance use was unrelated to changes in religious attendance, prior illicit drug use and prescription drug misuse were associated with a reduction in religious salience over the study period.
Publication Date
6-8-2018
Publication Title
Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion
Publisher
Wiley
First Page
156
Last Page
172
Recommended Citation
Burdette, A.M., Hill, T.D., Webb, N.S., Ford, J.A. and Haynes, S.H. (2018), Religious Involvement and Substance Use Among Urban Mothers. Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion, 57: 156-172. https://doi.org/10.1111/jssr.12501