Ironson Gail, Kremer Heidemarie, Lucette Aurelie
Department of Psychology, University of Miami, 5665 Ponce de Leon Blvd, Coral Gables, FL, 33124-0751, USA.
J Gen Intern Med. 2016 Sep;31(9):1068-76. doi: 10.1007/s11606-016-3668-4. Epub 2016 May 5.
Studies of spirituality in initially healthy people have shown a survival advantage, yet there are fewer research studies in the medically ill, despite the widespread use of spirituality/religiousness to cope with serious physical illness. In addition, many studies have used limited measures such as religious service attendance.
We aimed to examine if, independent of medication adherence, the use of spirituality/religiousness to cope with HIV predicts survival over 17 years.
This was a longitudinal study, started in 1997. Study materials were administered semi annually.
A diverse sample of 177 HIV patients initially in the mid-stage of disease (150-500 CD4-cells/mm(3); no prior AIDS-defining symptoms) participated in the study.
Participants were administered a battery of psychosocial questionnaires and a blood draw. They completed interviews and essays to assess current stressors. Spiritual coping (overall/strategies) was rated by qualitative content analysis of interviews regarding stress and coping with HIV, and essays.
Controlling for medical variables (baseline CD4/viral load) and demographics, Cox regression analyses showed that overall positive spiritual coping significantly predicted greater survival over 17 years (mortality HR = 0.56, p = 0.039). Findings held even after controlling for health behaviors (medication adherence, substance use) and social support. Particular spiritual coping strategies that predicted longer survival included spiritual practices (HR = 0.26, p < 0.001), spiritual reframing (HR = 0.27, p = 0.006), overcoming spiritual guilt (HR = 0.24, p < 0.001), spiritual gratitude (HR = 0.40, p = 0.002), and spiritual empowerment (HR = 0.52, p = 0.024), indicating that people using these strategies were 2-4 times more likely to survive.
To our knowledge this is the first study showing a prospective relationship of spiritual coping in people who are medically ill with survival over such a long period of time, and also specifically identifies several strategies of spirituality that may be beneficial.
对起初健康人群的灵性研究显示出生存优势,然而,尽管灵性/宗教信仰被广泛用于应对严重身体疾病,但针对身患疾病者的相关研究却较少。此外,许多研究采用的测量方法有限,如参加宗教仪式的次数。
我们旨在探讨,在不考虑药物依从性的情况下,利用灵性/宗教信仰来应对艾滋病毒感染是否能预测17年的生存期。
这是一项始于1997年的纵向研究。研究材料每半年发放一次。
177名处于疾病中期(CD4细胞计数为150 - 500个/立方毫米;无先前艾滋病界定症状)的艾滋病毒患者的多样化样本参与了该研究。
参与者接受了一系列心理社会调查问卷并进行了血液检测。他们完成了访谈和短文以评估当前的压力源。通过对关于压力和应对艾滋病毒感染的访谈及短文进行定性内容分析,对灵性应对(总体/策略)进行评分。
在控制医疗变量(基线CD4/病毒载量)和人口统计学因素后,Cox回归分析表明,总体积极的灵性应对显著预测了17年的更长生存期(死亡风险比 = 0.56,p = 0.039)。即使在控制了健康行为(药物依从性、物质使用)和社会支持后,该结果依然成立。预测更长生存期的特定灵性应对策略包括灵性实践(风险比 = 0.26,p < 0.001)、灵性重塑(风险比 = 0.27,p = 0.006)、克服灵性内疚(风险比 = 0.24,p < 0.001)、灵性感恩(风险比 = 0.40,p = 0.002)和灵性赋权(风险比 = 0.52,p = 0.024),这表明使用这些策略的人存活的可能性要高出2至4倍。
据我们所知,这是第一项显示身患疾病者的灵性应对与如此长时间生存期之间存在前瞻性关系的研究,并且还具体确定了几种可能有益的灵性策略。