Religion, Culture, and Health Equity among Marginalized U.S. Populations: Pathways, Evidence, and Practice Implications
Authors
University of South Florida (USA)
Article Information
DOI: 10.51244/IJRSI.2026.13010199
Subject Category: Humanities
Volume/Issue: 13/1 | Page No: 2303-2316
Publication Timeline
Submitted: 2026-01-22
Accepted: 2026-01-28
Published: 2026-02-16
Abstract
Religion and culture are not peripheral influences on health in the United States; they shape beliefs about illness, experiences of discrimination, coping strategies, social support, care-seeking behaviors, and trust in institutions. For marginalized populations whose health is already constrained by structural racism, poverty, immigration stress, and unequal access to care religion and culture can function as both protective resources and sites of vulnerability. A growing body of peer-reviewed evidence shows that religious involvement and spirituality are associated with mental health resilience and health behaviors in Black and Latino communities across the life course, while culturally and religiously incongruent care can intensify mistrust, reduce engagement, and deepen inequities. Faith-based organizations (FBOs), including Black churches, have demonstrated capacity to deliver health promotion interventions at scale, and systematic reviews suggest such programs can improve behaviors and support equity-oriented prevention strategies. This piece argue that achieving health equity requires moving beyond generic “cultural competence” toward structural competence, humble partnership with communities, and measurable integration of spiritual and cultural needs into patient-centered care.
Keywords
Health equity; Religion; Spirituality
Downloads
References
1. Brownson RC, Mazzucca-Ragan S, Jacob RR, Brownson CA, Hohman KH, Alongi J, Macchi M, Valko C, Eyler AA. Understanding health equity in public health practice in the United States. Journal of Public Health Management and Practice. 2023 Sep 1;29(5):691-700. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
2. Lipscomb HJ, Loomis D, McDonald MA, Argue RA, Wing S. A conceptual model of work and health disparities in the United States. International Journal of Health Services. 2006 Jan;36(1):25-50. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
3. Zimmerman FJ, Anderson NW. Trends in health equity in the United States by race/ethnicity, sex, and income, 1993-2017. JAMA network open. 2019 Jun 5;2(6):e196386-. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
4. Gilson L. Trust and the development of health care as a social institution. Social science & medicine. 2003 Apr 1;56(7):1453-68. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
5. Vaughn LM, Jacquez F, Baker RC. Cultural health attributions, beliefs, and practices: Effects on healthcare and medical education. mental. 2009;10:11. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
6. Park CL. Religion as a meaning‐making framework in coping with life stress. Journal of social issues. 2005 Dec;61(4):707-29. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
7. Roszak P, Horvat S, Oviedo L, Berry JA. Religion and growth in resilience: strategies to counter cognitive attacks. Pastoral Psychology. 2025 Jul 8:1-7. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
8. King PE, Mangan S, Riveros R. Religion, spirituality, and youth thriving: Investigating the roles of the developing mind and meaning-making. Handbook of positive psychology, religion, and spirituality. 2023:263-77. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
9. Lane SD. Belief, Behavior, and Health: Religion as a Social Determinant of Health. Routledge; 2024 Oct 3. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
10. Jamil AI, Firmansyah E. Embracing Diversity: Navigating Religious Identity in Multicultural Societies. Online Journal of Research in Islamic Studies. 2025 Jun 30;12(1):37-60. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
11. Oman D, Nuru-Jeter AM. Social identity and discrimination in religious/spiritual influences on health. Why religion and spirituality matter for public health: Evidence, implications, and resources. 2018 May 9:111-37. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
12. Searight HR. Ethical Challenges in Multi-Cultural Patient Care: Cross Cultural Issues at the End of Life. Springer; 2019 Aug 13. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
13. Razzaq N, Khan EF, Razzaq S. Analyzing the Role of Language and Religion in Culturally Competent Healthcare: An Interdisciplinary Perspective. Annals of Innovation in Medicine. 2023 Dec 12;1(3). [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
14. Mahajan G. Religion, community and development. InReligion, Community and Development 2010 Jun 2 (pp. 1-35). Routledge India. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
15. Schäfer SM. ‘Together we are strong!’Infrastructures of community, safety and power on a Christian Mission Compound. Religion, State & Society. 2024 May 26;52(2-3):195-214. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
16. Cavendish JC. Church‐based community activism: A comparison of Black and White Catholic congregations. Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion. 2000 Sep;39(3):371-84. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
17. DeSouza F, Parker CB, Spearman-McCarthy EV, Duncan GN, Black RM. Coping with racism: a perspective of COVID-19 church closures on the mental health of African Americans. Journal of racial and ethnic health disparities. 2021 Feb;8(1):7-11. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
18. Goldblum P, Thompkins Jr F, Lai T, Brown LM. African American faith communities and public health: Working at the intersections of COVID-19. Human Arenas. 2023 Mar;6(1):25-40. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
19. Derose KP, Williams MV, Branch CA, Flórez KR, Hawes-Dawson J, Mata MA, Oden CW, Wong EC. A community-partnered approach to developing church-based interventions to reduce health disparities among African-Americans and Latinos. Journal of racial and ethnic health disparities. 2019 Apr 15;6(2):254-64. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
20. Campbell MK, Hudson MA, Resnicow K, Blakeney N, Paxton A, Baskin M. Church-based health promotion interventions: evidence and lessons learned. Annual review of public health. 2007 Apr 21;28(1):213-34. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
21. Rowland ML, Isaac-Savage EP. As I see it: A study of African American pastors’ views on health and health education in the Black church. Journal of religion and health. 2014 Aug;53(4):1091-101. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
22. Markens S, Fox SA, Taub B, Gilbert ML. Role of Black churches in health promotion programs: lessons from the Los Angeles Mammography Promotion in Churches Program. American Journal of Public Health. 2002 May;92(5):805-10. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
23. Gandara E, Harvey IS, Foster M, Luo W, McKyer L, Burdine J, Martinez D. Facilitators and barriers when conducting adult health programs within the African American church: A systematic review. Journal of religion and health. 2023 Aug;62(4):2496-531. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
24. Wood RL. Faith in action: Religion, race, and democratic organizing in America. University of Chicago Press; 2002 Sep 15. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
25. Parra-Cardona R, Zapata O, Emerson M, Sandoval-Pliego RJ, García D. Faith-based organizations as leaders of implementation: Implementation science must recognize faith-based organizations as key leaders of change in underserved immigrant communities. Stanford social innovation review. 2021;19(3):21. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
26. Van Uden MH, Zondag HJ. Religion as an existential resource: On meaning-making, religious coping and rituals. European Journal of Mental Health. 2016 Apr 8;11(1-2):3-17. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
27. Çınaroğlu M. A tale of resilience and faith: Understanding grief through Islamic coping mechanisms. Spiritual Psychology and Counseling. 2024 May 1;9(2):169-86. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
28. Nguyen AW. Religion and mental health in racial and ethnic minority populations: A review of the literature. Innovation in aging. 2020;4(5):igaa035. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
29. Revens KE, Gutierrez D, Paul R, Reynolds AD, Price R, DeHaven MJ. Social support and religiosity as contributing factors to resilience and mental wellbeing in Latino immigrants: A community-based participatory research study. Journal of Immigrant and Minority Health. 2021 Oct;23(5):904-16. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
30. Neblett Jr EW. Racial, ethnic, and cultural resilience factors in African American youth mental health. Annual Review of Clinical Psychology. 2023 May 9;19(1):361-79. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
31. Kausar L. Cognitive and Affective Mechanisms of Discrimination and Subsequent Effects on Religious Minorities: A Psychosocial Analysis. Wah Academia Journal of Social Sciences. 2025 Jun 15;4(1):580-602. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
32. Oman D, Nuru-Jeter AM. Social identity and discrimination in religious/spiritual influences on health. Why religion and spirituality matter for public health: Evidence, implications, and resources. 2018 May 9:111-37. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
33. Ahmed N. Measurement of perceived interpersonal and societal anti-Muslim discrimination in the United States. Assessment. 2021 Mar;28(2):668-81. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
34. Martin MB. Perceived discrimination of Muslims in health care. Journal of Muslim Mental Health. 2015;9(2). [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
35. Padela AI, Azam L, Murrar S, Baqai B. Muslim American physicians' experiences with, and views on, religious discrimination and accommodation in academic medicine. Health Services Research. 2023 Jun;58(3):733-43. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
36. Hida RM, Hamoda HM. Caring for Muslim children and families in health care settings: Considerations and recommendations for pediatric psychologists. Clinical Practice in Pediatric Psychology. 2024 Dec;12(4):430-41. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
37. Beale Spencer M, Harpalani V, Cassidy E, Jacobs CY, Donde S, Goss TN, Muñoz‐Miller M, Charles N, Wilson S. Understanding vulnerability and resilience from a normative developmental perspective: Implications for racially and ethnically diverse youth. Developmental psychopathology: Volume one: Theory and method. 2015 Sep 5:627-72. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
38. Burgess ER, Kaziunas E, Jacobs M. Care frictions: A critical reframing of patient noncompliance in health technology design. Proceedings of the ACM on Human-Computer Interaction. 2022 Nov 11;6(CSCW2):1-31. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
39. Liu T. Religious Beliefs and Social Justice: A Reconsideration of the Social Functions of Religion in the Process of Modernization. Studies on Religion and Philosophy. 2025 Jan 21;1(1):66-82. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
40. Cogburn CD. Culture, race, and health: implications for racial inequities and population health. The Milbank Quarterly. 2019 Sep;97(3):736-61. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
41. Kim ME. The culture-structure framework: Beyond the cultural competence paradigm. J. Soc. & Soc. Welfare. 2019;46:5. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
42. Carpenter-Song EA, Schwallie MN, Longhofer J. Cultural competence reexamined: Critique and directions for the future. Psychiatric Services. 2007 Oct;58(10):1362-5. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
43. Zwingmann C, Klein C, Büssing A. Measuring religiosity/spirituality: Theoretical differentiations and categorization of instruments. Religions. 2011 Aug 11;2(3):345-57. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
44. Herzog PS, King DP, Khader RA, Strohmeier A, Williams AL. Studying religiosity and spirituality: A review of macro, micro, and meso-level approaches. Religions. 2020 Aug 24;11(9):437. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
45. Cummings JP, Pargament KI. Medicine for the spirit: Religious coping in individuals with medical conditions. Religions. 2010 Nov 12;1(1):28-53. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
46. Kent BV, Stroope S, Kanaya AM, Zhang Y, Kandula NR, Shields AE. Private religion/spirituality, self-rated health, and mental health among US South Asians. Quality of Life Research. 2020 Feb;29(2):495-504. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
47. Singal P, Chopra A. Spirituality and mental health among South Asians in the United States. Psychiatric Annals. 2023 Dec 1;53(12):550-5. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
48. Upenieks L, Kent BV, Kanaya AM, Eliassen AH, Cole SA, Shields AE. Belief in miracles, religious/spiritual struggles, and depressive symptoms: exploring variation among American Indian, South Asian, and White cohorts in the study on stress, spirituality, and health. Mental health, religion & culture. 2024 Jul 2;27(6):593-614. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
49. Haidar A, Nwosisi E, Burnett-Zeigler I. The role of religion and spirituality in adapting mindfulness-based interventions for Black American communities: A scoping review. Mindfulness. 2023 Aug;14(8):1852-67. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
50. Cutts T. Religiosity/spirituality, mental health, substance abuse: implications for population health. InHandbook on Religion and Health 2024 Aug 2 (pp. 62-77). Edward Elgar Publishing. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
51. Nguyen AW. Religion and mental health in racial and ethnic minority populations: A review of the literature. Innovation in aging. 2020;4(5):igaa035. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
52. Yeary KH, Klos LA, Linnan L. The examination of process evaluation use in church-based health interventions: a systematic review. Health Promotion Practice. 2012 Jul;13(4):524-34. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
53. Williams LB, Abu Farsakh B, Karle ER, Almogheer ZS, Coughlin S, Kim Yeary KH. How effective are church‐based weight‐loss interventions among Black adults? A systematic review. Obesity. 2024 Nov;32(11):2060-76. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
54. Allen SE. Doing black Christianity: Reframing black church scholarship. Sociology Compass. 2019 Oct;13(10):e12731. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
55. Freudenberg M. The Diversity of Contemporary Christianity in the United States: An Overview from a Sociology of Religion Perspective. Globale Christentümer. 2022 Aug 26:71-87. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
56. Padela AI, Zaidi D. The Islamic tradition and health inequities: A preliminary conceptual model based on a systematic literature review of Muslim health-care disparities. Avicenna journal of medicine. 2018 Jan;8(01):1-3. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
57. Thresia CU, Srinivas PN, Mohindra KS, Jagadeesan CK. The health of Indigenous populations in South Asia: a critical review in a critical time. International Journal of Health Services. 2022 Jan;52(1):61-72. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
58. Blum HA. Mindfulness equity and Western Buddhism: Reaching people of low socioeconomic status and people of color. International Journal of Dharma Studies. 2014 Dec 31;2(1):10. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
59. Stanley LR, Swaim RC, Kaholokula JK, Kelly KJ, Belcourt A, Allen J. The imperative for research to promote health equity in indigenous communities. Prevention Science. 2020 Jan;21(Suppl 1):13-21. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
60. Douglas KB, Hopson RE. Understanding the Black church: The dynamics of change. Journal of Religious Thought. 2000;56(2/1):95. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
61. Barber KH. Whither shall we go? The past and present of black churches and the public sphere. Religions. 2015 Mar 18;6(1):245-65. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
62. DeHaven MJ, Hunter IB, Wilder L, Walton JW, Berry J. Health programs in faith-based organizations: are they effective?. American journal of public health. 2004 Jun;94(6):1030-6. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
63. Nordtvedt M, Chapman LS. Health promotion in faith-based institutions and communities. American Journal of Health Promotion. 2011 Mar;25(4):TAHP-1. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
64. Bruce MA, Whitt-Glover MC. Faith-based initiatives to promote health. Family & Community Health. 2013 Jul 1;36(3):179-81. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
65. Derose KP, Williams MV, Branch CA, Flórez KR, Hawes-Dawson J, Mata MA, Oden CW, Wong EC. A community-partnered approach to developing church-based interventions to reduce health disparities among African-Americans and Latinos. Journal of racial and ethnic health disparities. 2019 Apr 15;6(2):254-64. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
66. Wu Z, Schimmele CM. Perceived religious discrimination and mental health. Ethnicity & Health. 2021 Oct 3;26(7):963-80. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
67. Taylor RJ, Chatters LM, Levin JS. Religion in the lives of African Americans: Social, psychological, and health perspectives. Sage; 2004. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
68. Parker JS, Purvis L, Williams B. Religious/spiritual struggles and mental health among black adolescents and emerging adults: A meta-synthesis. Journal of Black Psychology. 2023 Apr;49(2):153-99. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
69. Assari S. Race and ethnicity, religion involvement, church-based social support and subjective health in United States: A case of moderated mediation. International journal of preventive medicine. 2013 Feb;4(2):208. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
70. Ejem D, Steinhauser K, Dionne-Odom JN, Wells R, Durant RW, Clay OJ, Bakitas M. Exploring culturally responsive religious and spirituality health care communications among African Americans with advanced heart failure, their family caregivers, and clinicians. Journal of Palliative Medicine. 2021 Dec 1;24(12):1798-806. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
71. Coats H, Downey L, Sharma RK, Curtis JR, Engelberg RA. Quality of communication and trust in patients with serious illness: an exploratory study of the relationships of race/ethnicity, socioeconomic status, and religiosity. Journal of pain and symptom management. 2018 Oct 1;56(4):530-40. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
72. Balboni TA, VanderWeele TJ, Doan-Soares SD, Long KN, Ferrell BR, Fitchett G, Koenig HG, Bain PA, Puchalski C, Steinhauser KE, Sulmasy DP. Spirituality in serious illness and health. Jama. 2022 Jul 12;328(2):184-97. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
73. Campbell MK, Hudson MA, Resnicow K, Blakeney N, Paxton A, Baskin M. Church-based health promotion interventions: evidence and lessons learned. Annual review of public health. 2007 Apr 21;28(1):213-34. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
74. Maroney K, Laurent J, Alvarado F, Gabor A, Bell C, Ferdinand K, He J, Mills KT. Systematic review and meta-analysis of church-based interventions to improve cardiovascular disease risk factors. The American Journal of the Medical Sciences. 2023 Sep 1;366(3):199-208. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
75. Flórez KR, Payán DD, Palar K, Williams MV, Katic B, Derose KP. Church-based interventions to address obesity among African Americans and Latinos in the United States: a systematic review. Nutrition Reviews. 2020 Apr;78(4):304-22. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
76. Calvillo JE, Bailey SR. Latino religious affiliation and ethnic identity. Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion. 2015 Mar;54(1):57-78. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
77. Espinosa G. The Pentecostalization of Latin American and US Latino Christianity. Pneuma. 2004 Jan 1;26(2):262-92. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
78. Lopez C, Vazquez M, McCormick AS. Familismo, respeto, and bien educado: Traditional/cultural models and values in Latinos. InFamily literacy practices in Asian and Latinx families: Educational and cultural considerations 2022 Dec 7 (pp. 87-102). Cham: Springer International Publishing. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
79. Radina ME, Gibbons HM, Lim JY. Explicit versus implicit family decision-making strategies among Mexican American caregiving adult children. Marriage & Family Review. 2009 Apr 15;45(4):392-411. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
80. Revens KE, Gutierrez D, Paul R, Reynolds AD, Price R, DeHaven MJ. Social support and religiosity as contributing factors to resilience and mental wellbeing in Latino immigrants: A community-based participatory research study. Journal of Immigrant and Minority Health. 2021 Oct;23(5):904-16. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
81. Cardoso JB, Thompson SJ. Common themes of resilience among Latino immigrant families: A systematic review of the literature. Families in Society. 2010 Jul;91(3):257-65. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
82. Sanchez M, Diez S, Fava NM, Cyrus E, Ravelo G, Rojas P, Li T, Cano MA, De La Rosa M. Immigration stress among recent Latino immigrants: The protective role of social support and religious social capital. Social work in public health. 2019 May 19;34(4):279-92. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
83. Newman BJ, Hartman TK, Taber CS. Foreign language exposure, cultural threat, and opposition to immigration. Political Psychology. 2012 Oct;33(5):635-57. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
84. Douglas C. Religion and fake news: Faith-based alternative information ecosystems in the US and Europe. The Review of Faith & International Affairs. 2018 Jan 2;16(1):61-73. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
85. Leheza Y. Government, Religion and Fake News. Religion and Policy Journal. 2023 Dec 31;1(2):54-60. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
86. Smith AK, Sudore RL, Pérez-Stable EJ. Palliative care for Latino patients and their families: whenever we prayed, she wept. Jama. 2009 Mar 11;301(10):1047-57. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
87. Bernal G, Domenech Rodríguez MM. Advances in Latino family research: Cultural adaptations of evidence‐based interventions. Family process. 2009 Jun;48(2):169-78. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
88. Harmon BE, Schmidt M, Escobar F, San Diego ER, Steele A. Filling the gaps: The role of faith-based organizations in addressing the health needs of today’s Latino communities. Journal of religion and health. 2021 Apr;60(2):1198-213. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
89. Derose KP, Rodriguez C. A systematic review of church-based health interventions among Latinos. Journal of immigrant and minority health. 2020 Aug;22(4):795-815. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
90. Stowell E, O'Leary TK, Kimani E, Paasche-Orlow MK, Bickmore T, Parker AG. Investigating opportunities for crowdsourcing in church-based health interventions: A participatory design study. InProceedings of the 2020 CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems 2020 Apr 21 (pp. 1-12). [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
91. Habib DR, Klein LM, Perrin EM, Perrin AJ, Johnson SB. The role of primary care in advancing civic engagement and health equity: A conceptual framework. The Milbank Quarterly. 2023 Sep;101(3):731-67. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
92. Laird LD, Amer MM, Barnett ED, Barnes LL. Muslim patients and health disparities in the UK and the US. Archives of disease in childhood. 2007 Oct 1;92(10):922-6. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
93. Murrar S, Baqai B, Padela AI. Predictors of perceived discrimination in medical settings among Muslim women in the USA. Journal of racial and ethnic health disparities. 2024 Feb;11(1):150-6. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
94. Padela AI, Azam L, Murrar S, Baqai B. Muslim American physicians' experiences with, and views on, religious discrimination and accommodation in academic medicine. Health Services Research. 2023 Jun;58(3):733-43. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
95. Baqai B, Azam L, Davila O, Murrar S, Padela AI. Religious identity discrimination in the physician workforce: insights from two national studies of Muslim clinicians in the US. Journal of general internal medicine. 2023 Apr;38(5):1167-74. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
96. Abu-Ras W, Aboul-Enein BH, Almoayad F, Benajiba N, Dodge E. Mosques and public health promotion: a scoping review of faith-driven health interventions. Health Education & Behavior. 2024 Oct;51(5):677-90. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]
Metrics
Views & Downloads
Similar Articles
- A Psychoanalytical Study of the Gift of Magi
- Analyzing Community Initiatives and Government Interventions in Salt Farming Resource Management in Pangkajene and Kepulauan Districts
- Diaconal Ministries and the Ordination of Women
- Socio Economic Changes in Sagar Island before and After Cyclone Aila
- Grief and Its Transformations in Joan Didion’s the Year of Magical Thinking