Department of Psychiatry, Faculty of Medicine, Prince of Songkla University, Hatyai, Songkhla, 90110 Thailand,
1 Departments of Medicine, Psychological Medicine and Public Health and Community Medicine, University of Sydney, and the Drug and Alcohol Department, Royal Prince Alfred Hospital, Sydney, New South Wales and
2 Centre for Drug and Alcohol Studies, Department of Psychiatry, University of Queensland, Royal Brisbane Hospital, Herston, Queensland, Australia
Received 8 January 2001; in revised form 31 July 2001; accepted 28 August 2001
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ABSTRACT |
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INTRODUCTION |
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As the state religion in Thailand, Buddhism has a very significant influence on Thai lives. Approximately 95% of the population in Thailand declare themselves to be Buddhist, mostly of the Hinayana (or Theravada) school. The Buddhist layman is expected to conform as closely as possible to certain moral injunctions known as the Five Precepts (Silas Ha). These list five immoral actions which a lay-Buddhist should train himself or herself to avoid, namely: destroying life; taking what is not given; wrong-doing in sexual desires; false speech (including lies, harsh words, tale-bearing and idle gossip); and consumption of distilled and fermented intoxicants causing carelessness. Besides the Five Precepts, on Full Moon, New Moon and two intermediate holy days in the lunar month, devout Buddhists go to a temple and declare their desire to observe for that day, extra precepts, the Eight Precepts.
There are a number of religious activities which an ordinary Buddhist generally practises. These include: (1) going to a temple on a holy day or Buddhist festival, or to a Buddhist ceremony to listen to a sermon and make merit'; (2) for the average person, often worshipping the Triple Gems: the Buddha, the Dharmma (the Buddha's teaching) and Sangha (the Noble Order of the Enlightened Followers) (Khantipalo, 1970), by saying a Pali prayer before going to bed; (3) giving alms to monks who walk by people's houses in the early morning; (4) morning and evening chanting, which can be practised at home or in a temple, but is usually only performed by strongly religious people. Apart from participation in various religious activities, lay-people are encouraged to make merit' (making punna' which means those actions which clean and purify the mind) by practising Dharmma (Khantipalo, 1970
) and meditation. In Thailand 4060 years ago, boys were often sent to stay with a monk in a temple either on a permanent or part-time basis and were known as temple boys'. A Buddhist temple or monastery in those days often also served as a dormitory for boys. Boys who lived there permanently were usually children of poor homes who were given food, board and informal education, in return for performing domestic duties. In addition, boys came during the school term from outlying areas to attend school or college in a provincial capital or Bangkok.
An important moment in a Thai man's life is his ordination. This is part of both Thai culture and Buddhist ceremony. Most men aim to attain a token monkhood at some point in their lives, usually at the age of 21 years and before marriage, to experience the discipline and tranquility of the monastic life. Before 21, a boy can be ordained as a novice. Men usually live as a monk for three months. However, some live as monks for shorter or longer periods or even for life. The novices or monks can study Buddhist teaching in up to three levels of Dharmma and nine grades of Pali, each with their separate examinations.
Buddhist beliefs include belief of merit and sin, Kharmma (the result of one's deeds), and belief in an after-life. Because of the influence on Bharmmha (an ancient Indian religion), some Thai Buddhist people believe in heaven and hell. Some also believe in the supernatural as evidenced by beliefs in magical amulets, spirits, incarnation, ghosts and magical incantation. These Bharmmha and supernatural beliefs are not part of Buddhist beliefs.
Despite the influence of Buddhism, many Thai people consume alcohol and a proportion are alcohol-dependent or hazardous or harmful drinkers. Most previous studies on the relationship between religiosity and alcohol use have investigated Christian religions. The present study focuses on another major religion, Buddhism, and its association with alcohol consumption and alcohol use disorders. We postulated that subscribing to Buddhist beliefs, value and teaching would be inversely related to the development of hazardous/harmful alcohol use and dependence.
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SUBJECTS AND METHODS |
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There were no significant differences between the three groups with regards to level of education, location of residence, working status and social class. However, the hazardous/harmful drinkers were more likely to be single, widowed or divorced than were the other groups (P < 0.05). Half of the subjects were living in urban or semi-urban areas.
A structured interview questionnaire was used to obtain information regarding the subjects' religious life and practices. It included items on common religious activities and experiences of Thai Buddhist men, i.e. whether the subject was brought up in a religious family, the experience of staying with monks in a temple, and the experience of ordination as a Buddhist monk. It also included items on attendance at a temple on a holy day or festival, giving alms to monks, morning and evening chanting, and whether the respondent worshipped the Triple Gems. Other questions enquired about current observance of the Five and the Eight Precepts, and the subject's Buddhist and supernatural beliefs. Affirmative responses to items on current and past involvement in religious activities were summed to form composite variables reflecting current and past frequency of participation in any religious activities.
This questionnaire was developed on the basis of available literature on Buddhist life and discussions with Buddhist monks and scholars of Buddhism. The questionnaire was reviewed for its face validity by experts in Buddhism, psychiatrists, sociologists and clinical psychologists experienced in drug and alcohol research. It was then pre-tested on 10 patients with alcohol dependence and 10 light drinkers. Their acceptance and comprehension of the questionnaire were judged to be satisfactory.
To examine the association between religious beliefs and activities, and alcohol use disorders, an odds ratio, adjusted for socio-demographic variables was calculated for each religious variable, using polytomous logistic regression. Diagnosis of alcohol use disorders was used as the dependent variable. This variable has three categories, and the non/infrequent/light drinking group was used as the reference category for comparison with either the hazardous/harmful drinking group or with the alcohol-dependent group. Any variable in the early religious life or current religious practices and beliefs with P < 0.25 according to the univariate test was considered as a candidate for the multivariate model, along with demographic variables. This approach was adopted to provide as complete a control of confounding as possible within the data set. It was based on the fact that individual variables which do not exhibit strong confounding, when taken collectively, can exert considerable confounding. The P < 0.25 level was used as a screening criterion for selection of candidate variables in order to identify potentially important variables which might not be included if a more traditional cut-off (P < 0.05) was used (Hosmer and Lemeshow, 1989). Variables whose removal from the model caused significant change of the model's fit (P < 0.05) were retained in the model.
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RESULTS |
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Current religious activities
More than 85% of the subjects reported never or seldom engaging in a group activity in a temple. Worshipping the Triple Gems, which is regarded as a simple everyday activity for a Buddhist man, was sometimes practised by half or fewer of the men (50, 41 and 33% of the non/infrequent/light drinkers, hazardous/harmful drinkers and alcohol dependents, respectively). Offering alms to a Buddhist monk was performed by 1729% of subjects. Morning or evening chanting and meditation are activities a strongly religious person would do, and were performed by only 56% of subjects. Numbers of affirmative responses to these activities were summed to form a combined variable reflecting frequency of participation in any current religious activities. About half of the subjects across the three groups (58, 60 and 52% of the non/infrequent/light drinkers, hazardous/harmful drinkers and alcohol dependents, respectively) were sometimes or often involved in any of these activities.
Current religious practices and beliefs
There were no statistically significant differences between the three groups with respect to their interest in studying Dharmma, their beliefs in merit-sin, Kharmma, next life, selected supernatural beliefs, and the regularity of their observance of the Five and Eight Precepts (Table 2). However, when asked which of the Five Precepts the subject observed most and which precept Thai men in general should observe most, hazardous/harmful drinkers and the alcohol dependents were less likely to select Precept V (not becoming intoxicated) than were non/infrequent/ light drinkers.
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Significant associations between religious life and alcohol use disorders
Being a temple boy was the only factor relating to early religious life that was associated with an increased odds of being alcohol dependent in adulthood (Table 3). With regard to current religious practices and beliefs, hazardous/harmful drinkers or alcohol dependents were less likely to select the Fifth Precept (not becoming intoxicated) as the one most observed by themselves and by Thai men in general, were less likely to express an interest in studying Buddha's teaching, or to refrain from drinking on a Buddhist holy day. In addition, the hazardous/harmful drinkers and alcohol dependents were less likely to report being moderatelystrongly religious or as always employing religious teaching as a guiding principle in their daily lives than were non/infrequent/light drinkers.
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DISCUSSION |
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All three groups of subjects were similar in terms of their early religious life and about a half never participated in family religious activities during childhood. We had postulated that a highly religious environment in early life would be inversely related to alcohol use disorders in adulthood but no such relationship was evident. In fact, having been a temple boy was the only childhood religious factor which was significantly associated with alcohol dependence, but was positively, rather than negatively, associated. Subjects who had been temple boys were twice as likely to be alcohol dependent as those who had not. Up to 45% of subjects had been temple boys when they were about 1012 years old. They did this for various reasons, e.g. to obtain accommodation when schooling was far from home. In the past, a temple had an additional role as a dormitory for boys. These boys may have had fewer restrictions and increased opportunity to experiment with alcohol as a group of teenagers living together. Monitoring of the boys may have been difficult, particularly in large temples with many boys. In addition, it is possible that families with alcohol-related problems and consequent difficulties in providing adequate care for their children could have sent their sons to stay in a temple. Being a temple boy in some cases might be a proxy for physical, psychological, or socio-economic difficulties. Life as a temple boy could also result in stress through separation from family. Today the role of the temple as a dormitory for boys has become less important and temples play little role in the education of children in Thailand.
In keeping with tradition, most of the subjects had been ordained as a monk at an average age of 22 years. It is therefore not surprising that we did not see any relationship between this experience and the later development of alcohol use disorders. Most subjects did relatively little Buddhist study during this period.
Consistent with studies of the Christian religion (Gorsuch and Butler, 1976; Larson and Wilson, 1980
; Gartner et al., 1991
), a significant inverse relationship was found between self-perception of being moderately to strongly religious, and current hazardous/harmful drinking and alcohol dependence. Two indirect measures of religiosity, being interested in studying Buddha's teaching' and perceiving that religious teaching always influenced daily life', were also inversely associated with odds of being a hazardous/harmful or dependent drinker.
The selection of the most important precept to observe was also different between alcohol dependents, hazardous/harmful drinkers and non/infrequent/light drinkers. Those who chose the Fifth Precept (refraining from alcohol or other intoxicants) as the most important precept to observe, either for themselves or for men in general, were one in ten to one in two times as likely to be in the alcohol-dependent and hazardous/harmful drinking groups, respectively. Some of these respondents explained that they considered the Fifth Precept as the most important one to observe, because the use of intoxicants is a potential source of carelessness; if one is intoxicated, one is more prone to engage in immoral activities, such as adultery. The low adherence to the Five Precepts in the hazardous/ harmful drinkers and alcohol dependents may reflect a consequence of their involvement with alcohol or alternatively their heavier drinking may result from a lack of interest in, or ability to follow, Buddhist teaching.
The three groups of subjects did not differ significantly in most current religious practices. It may have been difficult to demonstrate a relationship between Buddhist religious life and alcohol use disorders, even if there were such a relationship, because of the difficulty in assessing Buddhist religiosity. Buddhism emphasizes behaviour and outcome of the deed. A good Buddhist is required to control his or her actions by observing precepts, by purifying and concentrating the mind by meditation, and by developing wisdom. A strongly religious Buddhist is not obliged to visit a temple or participate in any formal religious functions, so there is no regular group activity, such as the Sunday church services in Christian denominations, which can be readily measured. Indeed, when Buddhists go to a temple and participate in a religious ceremony (e.g. a funeral ceremony) or in a religious festival, their attendance is partly tradition and partly a social obligation. It is not uncommon to see people drink or even get drunk in the temple grounds during these events. Accordingly, one cannot measure how religious a Buddhist is simply by his involvement in religious ceremony. Religiosity also includes aspects of affiliation, devotion, and beliefs (King and Hunt, 1975) which may be difficult to measure. Furthermore, difficulties in obtaining reliable information on religious belief may have been increased in some cases by limited skills of communication or defensive attitudes (Crossley, 1995
). Accordingly, in the current study, only a superficial measure of religious practice and beliefs was possible.
The casecontrol study offers us the opportunity to assess associations between several aspects of religious upbringing and religiosity in relation to current alcohol use behaviours, but may be subject to recall and reporting error. A prospective cohort study of the effect of religious upbringing on later development of alcohol use disorders would allow a fuller analysis of causative or protective factors, but would be an expensive, large and long-term undertaking.
While a high percentage of subjects expressed a belief in the importance of religious teaching and of practising religious activities, a low percentage enacted it. It is generally accepted that a Buddhist man should conform to the Five Precepts, but less than half of the subjects across the three groups observed them regularly. As Thai people are already aware that Buddhism teaches against drinking, a strategy to enhance their conformity to the Buddhist principle could be considered as a preventive or therapeutic measure, particularly in those who have firm Buddhist beliefs. Care would need to be taken so that this was done sensitively, so that it helped those with alcohol use disorders rather than amplifying the problem through generating guilt.
The incorporation of community-based educational activities into some religious activities may be a feasible approach. For example, on Buddhist holy days, the temple is a place for social gathering of villagers after the religious ceremonies have finished. It could therefore provide an opportunity for health personnel to hold an educational event, such as a drink-free day' to promote drink-less' or safe-limit' drinking concepts. This would be in keeping with the Buddhist custom of refraining from alcohol, particularly on Buddhist holy days and during the Lent period. To date, there has been no exploration of whether Buddhist beliefs can be sensitively integrated into treatment programmes for alcohol dependence, in the way Christian concepts were introduced into the 12-step programme of Alcoholics Anonymous. Thai Buddhist traditions of restraint with regard to alcohol could be sensitively incorporated into prevention and treatment programmes and this is an area that requires further research.
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FOOTNOTES |
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REFERENCES |
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