Department of Medicine, King Abdulaziz University, Jeddah, Saudi Arabia.
Department of Psychiatry, King Abdulaziz University, Jeddah, Saudi Arabia.
J Relig Health. 2019 Feb;58(1):221-235. doi: 10.1007/s10943-018-00745-y.
We examined relationships between religiosity and Saudi cancer patients' beliefs about the spread of cancer, chemotherapy, and radiation therapy through close physical contact. Surveyed were 64 patients seen in university oncology clinics. Assessed were beliefs about the spread of cancer and its treatments, along with religious, demographic, social, psychological, and cancer-related characteristics. Greater religiosity was related to older age, non-Saudi nationality, less anxiety, earlier cancer stage, and greater time since initial diagnosis. Non-significant trends suggested that religious practices were associated with less, but intrinsic religious beliefs with more concern about contagiousness, although the findings were limited by low statistical power.
我们考察了宗教信仰与沙特癌症患者对癌症传播、化疗和放疗的看法之间的关系,这些看法是通过密切的身体接触形成的。调查了在大学肿瘤诊所就诊的 64 名患者。评估了他们对癌症传播及其治疗方法的看法,以及宗教、人口统计学、社会、心理和癌症相关特征。宗教信仰越虔诚,年龄越大,国籍非沙特,焦虑程度越低,癌症分期越早,初始诊断后时间越长。虽然研究结果受到统计能力低的限制,但非显著趋势表明,宗教实践与对传染性的担忧较少有关,而内在宗教信仰则与对传染性的担忧较多有关。