Rosenfeld Michal, Goldblatt Hadass, Greenblatt-Kimron Lee, Cohen Miri
School of Social Work, Zefat Academic College, Zefat, Israel.
Department of Nursing, Faculty of Social Welfare & Health Sciences, University of Haifa, Haifa, Israel.
J Relig Health. 2023 Jun;62(3):2033-2049. doi: 10.1007/s10943-023-01751-5. Epub 2023 Feb 4.
This qualitative study examined fatalistic beliefs and cancer causal attributions among people without cancer. Participants were 30 Israeli women and men aged 51-70 from diverse sociocultural backgrounds who participated in four focus groups. Three main themes emerged, referring to the variability in fatalistic beliefs of cancer occurrence and cancer outcome, the duality in attributing causality to divine providence and mere luck or chance, and the connection between distinct fatalistic beliefs and health behaviors. Data analysis enabled an expansion of the understanding of cancer fatalism as a multidimensional structure, whereby interactions between causality attribution and different fatalistic beliefs are related to prevention and screening behaviors.
这项定性研究调查了非癌症患者的宿命论信念和癌症因果归因。参与者是30名年龄在51至70岁之间、来自不同社会文化背景的以色列男女,他们参加了四个焦点小组。出现了三个主要主题,分别涉及癌症发生和癌症结果宿命论信念的变异性、将因果关系归因于神意与纯粹运气或机遇的二元性,以及不同宿命论信念与健康行为之间的联系。数据分析有助于将对癌症宿命论的理解扩展为一种多维结构,即因果归因与不同宿命论信念之间的相互作用与预防和筛查行为相关。