
FAIR is a non-profit organization dedicated to providing well-documented answers to criticisms of the doctrine, practice, and history of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
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==Frage== | ==Frage== | ||
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Kritiker berechneten, dass die Rate des Antidepressiva Gebrauches unter Mormonen viel höher ist, als die der allgemeinen Bevölkerung. Sie behaupten, dass das ein Beweis dafür ist, dass die Mitgliedschaft in der HLT-Kirche wegen des Druckes "vollkommen" zu sein, übermäßig anstrengend ist. | Kritiker berechneten, dass die Rate des Antidepressiva Gebrauches unter Mormonen viel höher ist, als die der allgemeinen Bevölkerung. Sie behaupten, dass das ein Beweis dafür ist, dass die Mitgliedschaft in der HLT-Kirche wegen des Druckes "vollkommen" zu sein, übermäßig anstrengend ist. | ||
===Quelle=== | |||
Kent Ponder | |||
Dr. Kent Ponder, "Mormon Women, Prozac® and Therapy," unveröffentlicht, 2003.{{ref|ponder1}} | |||
==Antwort== | ==Antwort== |
Kritiker berechneten, dass die Rate des Antidepressiva Gebrauches unter Mormonen viel höher ist, als die der allgemeinen Bevölkerung. Sie behaupten, dass das ein Beweis dafür ist, dass die Mitgliedschaft in der HLT-Kirche wegen des Druckes "vollkommen" zu sein, übermäßig anstrengend ist.
Dr. Kent Ponder, "Mormon Women, Prozac® and Therapy," unveröffentlicht, 2003.[1]
Prescription drug use by state or region has been difficult to assess. In 2002 Express Scripts, one of the largest mail-order pharmaceutical providers in the United States, released their Prescription Drug Atlas, which shows prescription drug orders from their individual clients by state. A Los Angeles Times article on the study concluded that
What the study did not indicate is the reason antidepressant use was higher in Utah than in other states. Anti-Mormon critics were quick to jump on the high rate of LDS Church membership in Utah, blaming the Church and Mormon culture. Kent Ponder concludes:
Yet the study released by Express Scripts makes no claims as to why some states use more prescription drugs of one type or another. Far from being "clearly, closely and definitely" the fault of the LDS Church, Ponder has no evidence whatsoever; he is giving his belief and casting it as a proven fact.
The Express Scripts study includes a number of factors that Ponder overlooked in his paper that are helpful in assessing the situation:
There are other possible factors outside the scope of the Express Scripts study that may also play a part here:
Shortly after Mr. Ponder released his paper, Brigham Young University sociologist Sherrie Mills Johnson used data from national surveys to show that Mormon women are less likely to be depressed than American women in general. Johnson's conclusions upheld findings of some earlier studies that Mormons have no more depression than the nation's population as a whole.[5]
While Utah does have the highest rate of antidepressant use in the United States, there is no evidence that this is because of stress from the LDS lifestyle and culture. Credible research has shown that LDS women are actually more likely to identify themselves as "happy" than non-Mormon women.
Until further research is done, critics of the Church have no evidence that higher anti-depressant use in Utah is due to imagined difficulties of the LDS lifestyle.
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