“…Studies looking at affiliation have often found that being nonaffiliated is not associated with self-reported measures of health. [31][32][33] Studies that differentiated between different types of nonaffiliation (atheists, agnostics, nonreligious, etc) found that these effects are complex, often with some nonaffiliated groups having better health outcomes than other nonaffiliates and the religiously affiliated. 31,32,34,35 Recent studies using European population data from the Survey of Health, Aging and Retirement in Europe (SHARE) found that religious education and participation in a religious organization are associated with lower rates of noncommunicable diseases, disabilities, depressive symptoms, health behaviors, and poor self-rated health.…”