Research Centre for Health Promotion, University of Bergen, Norway.
Glob Health Promot. 2019 Sep;26(3):15-22. doi: 10.1177/1757975917715884. Epub 2017 Jul 21.
Although there are many studies assessing the influence of religious beliefs on health they do not agree on whether the impact is positive or negative. More so, there is no consensus in the available literature on the definition of fatalism and what it means to individuals. In this phenomenological study we attempt to define what religious fatalism means to people living with diabetes in Khartoum, and how it affects their health beliefs, and how those beliefs affect their sense of coherence and generalized resistance resources, since salutogenesis is the guiding theory in this study. Three Copts and five Sunnis living with diabetes were interviewed, as well as a Coptic clergyman and a Sunni scholar. The semi-structured interviews were recorded and transcribed verbatim for analysis. Thematic network analysis was used to code salient concepts into basic themes, organizing themes and global themes. The empirical findings are thus structured as the three global themes: (1) fatalism and free will; (2) health responsibility; (3) acceptance and coping. Fatalism was defined as events beyond an individual's control where it is then the individual's free will to seek healthy behavior. Thus health responsibility was stressed upon by the participants in this study as well as the clergyman and scholar. There is also the concept of 'God doesn't give one what one cannot handle' that the participants relate to coping and acceptance. This study finds that the meaning of religious fatalism held by participants and religious clergy is not disempowering. The participants believe that they are responsible for their health. The meaning derived from fatalism is related to how they can accept what is beyond their control and cope with their health condition. Religious fatalism contributed to comprehensibility, manageability and meaningfulness in our participants' response to diabetes.
尽管有许多研究评估宗教信仰对健康的影响,但它们在影响是正面还是负面方面并未达成一致。更重要的是,在现有的关于宿命论的定义及其对个人意义的文献中,也没有达成共识。在这项现象学研究中,我们试图定义宗教宿命论对居住在喀土穆的糖尿病患者意味着什么,以及它如何影响他们的健康信念,以及这些信念如何影响他们的整体感和普遍应对资源,因为健康本体论是本研究的指导理论。我们采访了 3 名科普特教徒和 5 名逊尼派教徒,以及一名科普特教牧师和一名逊尼派学者。对半结构化访谈进行了录音,并逐字转录进行分析。使用主题网络分析将突出的概念编码为基本主题、组织主题和全局主题。实证发现因此被构建为三个全局主题:(1)宿命论和自由意志;(2)健康责任;(3)接受和应对。宿命论被定义为个体无法控制的事件,然后个体可以自由选择寻求健康行为。因此,参与者以及牧师和学者都强调了健康责任。还有一个概念是“上帝不会给人无法承受的东西”,参与者将其与应对和接受联系起来。这项研究发现,参与者和宗教神职人员所持有的宗教宿命论的含义并没有使他们失去力量。参与者认为他们对自己的健康负责。宿命论的意义与他们如何接受无法控制的事情以及应对自己的健康状况有关。宗教宿命论有助于参与者对糖尿病的反应的可理解性、可管理性和意义。