Franklin Monica D, Schlundt David G, Wallston Kenneth A
Vanderbilt University, USA.
J Health Psychol. 2008 Apr;13(3):323-35. doi: 10.1177/1359105307088137.
Health researchers struggle to understand barriers to improving health in the African-American community. The African-American church is one of the most promising venues for health promotion, disease prevention, and disparities reduction. Religious fatalism, the belief that health outcomes are inevitable and/or determined by God, may inhibit healthy behaviors for a subset of religious persons. This study reports the development and validation of the Religious Health Fatalism Questionnaire, a measurement tool for studying faith-related health beliefs in African-Americans. Participants included 276 members of seven predominantly African-American churches. Factor analysis indicated three dimensions: (1) Divine Provision; (2) Destined Plan; and (3) Helpless Inevitability. Evidence is presented for the reliability, convergent and predictive validity of the Religious Health Fatalism Questionnaire.
健康研究人员努力理解非裔美国人社区改善健康状况的障碍。非裔美国人教会是促进健康、预防疾病和减少差异最有前景的场所之一。宗教宿命论,即认为健康结果是不可避免的和/或由上帝决定的信念,可能会抑制一部分宗教人士的健康行为。本研究报告了宗教健康宿命论问卷的开发与验证,这是一种用于研究非裔美国人与信仰相关的健康信念的测量工具。参与者包括来自七个主要为非裔美国人的教会的276名成员。因素分析表明有三个维度:(1) 神圣供给;(2) 注定计划;(3) 无助的必然性。文中给出了宗教健康宿命论问卷的信度、聚合效度和预测效度的证据。