Abstract

Abstract The purpose of this study was to determine the relationship of several aspects of religiosity to death anxiety among students attending high school in a rural portion of East Alabama. The Death Anxiety Scale and a multidimensional scale of religiosity were completed by 312 students. Data were analyzed using stepwise multiple-regression analysis. Results indicated that six variables—sex, religiosity: the ideological scale, religiosity: the intellectual scale, religious affiliation, born-again status, and race-were significant correlates of death anxiety.

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