| Literature DB >> 29690887 |
Victor Counted1, Adam Possamai2, Tanya Meade2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Despite the increasing number of evidence-based research on relational spirituality (RS) and quality of life (QoL) in medical-health research, little is known about the links between RS and QoL outcomes and the mechanisms by which RS aspects are functionally tied to QoL.Entities:
Keywords: Integrative research review; Quality of life; Relational spirituality
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29690887 PMCID: PMC5926536 DOI: 10.1186/s12955-018-0895-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Health Qual Life Outcomes ISSN: 1477-7525 Impact factor: 3.186
Fig. 1Prisma flow diagram of the study based on literature search from February to March 2017
Articles related to relational spirituality and quality of life for the last 10 years
| References | Context & Method | Outcome/Findings |
|---|---|---|
| ***Idler et al. [ | A prospective study. Interviews ( | Those who had a sense of religious attachment were more likely to see friends, and they had better QoL, fewer depressive feelings, and were observed by the interviewer to find life more exciting compared with the less religious respondents. |
| *** Saffari et al. [ | Cross-sectional survey design (n-362) with Muslim patients undergoing haemodialysis. | Spiritual/religious factors were related to QoL and health status. Regression models revealed that demographics, clinical variables, and especially spiritual/religious factors explained about 40% of variance of QoL and nearly 25% of the variance in health status. |
| # and #* | Quantitative interviews and cross-sectional design with 111 Individuals With Dementia (IWD) and their family caregivers from two service-based organizations in the San Francisco Bay Area and Cleveland, Ohio. | After controlling for care-related stress, one’s own religiosity is not significantly related to individuals’ or caregivers’ perceptions of the QoL of individuals with Dementia. However, when modelled for both the individuals and their caregivers, effects of religiosity on perceptions of QoL, caregivers’ religiosity was positively related to the QoL of individuals with Dementia whereas the religiosity of individuals with Dementia was negatively associated with caregivers’ perceptions of IWDs’ QoL. |
| # Miller et al. [ | Cross-sectional survey with 44 (dyads) couples between 49 and 73 years of age following a first-time cardiac event. | The findings suggest that there is no association between dimensions of spirituality and QoL and perception of the patient’s physical self-efficacy following a first-time cardiac event. |
| # Nguyen et al. [ | A prospective study. Data was analysed from the 2002 National Health Interview Survey ( | Even though there was no association between prayer and functional status or QoL, results show that the use of prayer for health was the most common complementary alternative medical therapy reported by those aged 55 to 85 (52.3%), which was more than twice as common as any other category of complementary therapy in term of users of biologically based therapies (20.4%) which predicted better functional status. |
| ***Ai et al. [ | Quantitative interviews with 294 middle-aged and older patients following open-heart surgery. | Results show support for adaptive faith-based coping in patients, suggesting that prayer coping was positively associated with cognitive and behavioural changes, as well as perceived social support from family, friends, and significant others at the time of participant’s surgery. |
| ***Calvo et al. [ | Quantitative interviews with 75 consecutive Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS) patients and their informal caregivers, using tests evaluating religiosity, QoL, satisfaction with life. | Results showed that the QoL of the caregivers of patients with ALS was associated with their private religiousness (i.e. subjective religiosity) whereas their satisfaction with life related to their overall religiosity. |
| ***Kashdan & Nezlek [ | A 1239 days daily diary study on 87 college students using lagged analysis to examine whether spirituality is causing greater well-being or vice versa. | There was a significant positive relationship between daily spirituality, self-esteem, meaning in life, and positive affect. Furthermore, present-day spirituality was associated with next day’s meaning in life. There was no evidence shown that supports that meaning in life predicted next day spirituality. Lower positive affect and greater negative emotion on 1 day was associated with greater spirituality on the next day. |
| ***Nolan et al. [ | Quantitative interviews were conducted with stable outpatients with schizophrenia ( | Results show that about 68% of the participants were involved in one form of religious activity that involved their religious others. 64% of the participants indicated that being connected to a faith community was important to them. 91% indicated that they were involved in private religious activities that involve praying at least once a day. These kinds of positive religious coping (i.e., religious forgiveness, seeking spiritual support, collaborative religious coping, spiritual connection, religious purification, and benevolent religious reappraisal) were associated with greater QoL ( |
| #* and # | Longitudinal study. | Prayer is not directly associated with improvements in psychological well-being. However, when moderated by attachment to God there was a relationship between prayer and psychological well-being. This association was only seen in individuals with secure attachments and not with those who are insecurely attached to God. |
| # Sorensen et al. [ | A cross-sectional survey from a sample of 2086 cancer patients and 6258 cancer-free controls from the Nord-Trøndelag Health Study in Norway that took place between 2006 and 2008. | Spirituality in terms of ‘seeking God’s help’ was associated with lower levels of sexual QoL in the unadjusted model, but when adjusted for other factors (e.g., gender, age, anxiety, neuroticism, extraversion, follow-up time, daily smoking, infrequent exercise, negative outlook, and positive outlook) it did not remain significant for life satisfaction or to QoL measures. There was a lack of association between ‘Seeking God’s Help’ and Life Satisfaction among patients, nor was ‘Seeking God’s Help’ associated with Disease-Specific QoL in patients with breast, prostate, or colorectal cancer. |
| **Yun et al. [ | A prospective cohort study of 481 terminally ill Korean cancer patients. 76% ( | Those who used mind-body interventions (e.g. meditation, prayer therapy, music therapy, art therapy, yoga, horticultural therapy) experienced a significant decline in their QoL compared to non-users. Participants using prayer therapy showed a significantly worse survival of insomnia. |
| **Levin [ | Data collected from a cross-sectional survey of a random national sample of Jewish participants ( | Frequency of prayer was inversely related to self-rated health, and positively associated with activity limitation, physical symptoms, and poor physical functioning. |
| ***Moon & Kim [ | A cross-sectional survey with older Koreans ( | There were associations between dimensions of depression, QoL, and spirituality. Spirituality explained the variance on depression and QoL amongst Christians, but did not account for the difference in the Buddhist sample. |
| ***Krumrei et al. [ | A cross-sectional survey with 208 Jewish men and women. | There was a positive correlation between physical health and trust in God (r.14, |
| ***Lee et al. [ | A cross sectional study with 198 persons with HIV/AIDS in urban Philadelphia. | Results of the multiple hierarchical analyses reveal that negative religious coping was significantly related to low levels of QoL when adjusted for demographic and clinical variables. Positive religious coping was also significantly associated with positive affect and life satisfaction, but not with overall QoL. |
| ***Currier et al. [ | A cross-sectional data on 678 military Veterans with posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). | When adjusted for demographic risk factors, combat exposure, and severe PTSD symptoms in the structural equation modelling, results revealed that spirituality was significantly associated with forgiveness and QoL. “Higher levels of spiritual functioning were associated with fewer forgiveness problems among these Veterans, and their propensity to forgive self and others was also concurrently linked with QOL” (p.175). |
| ***Canada et al. [ | Mediation analyses was conducted on data collected from the American Cancer Society’s Study of Cancer Survivors-II ( | Results show evidence that faith was strongly associated with meaning and peace in uncontrolled analyses. The mediation analyses show that faith had a significant positive effect on mental functioning (when mediated with greater meaning) and physical functioning (when mediated by both meaning and peace). |
| ***Krause et al. [ | Data were collected from a nationwide survey with adults ( | The structural equation modelling analyses revealed that those who received spiritual support from members of a faith community experienced stronger benevolent images of God (B = .362, |
| # Rohani et al. [ | A cross-sectional survey with Iranian women with breast cancer ( | Spirituality and positive religious coping was not associated with increases in QoL in Iranian patients. |
Note: Showing evidence of: *** positive association between RS and QoL. #* indirect association between RS and QoL. ** negative association between RS and QoL. # lack of association between RS and QoL
Emerging themes related to relational spirituality and quality of life for the last 10 years
| References | Domain of QoL & Instrument | Meaning of RS & Instrument | Main Idea |
|---|---|---|---|
| Idler et al. [ | Health status and functional ability, family and friendship networks, and psychological well-being | The idea of a connection to the sacred through religious rituals or experiences that serve as sources of strength and comfort in the last year of life. | QoL in the last year of life is positively related to subjective religiosity due to the social support that is gained in the process of associating with religious believers. |
| Saffari et al. [ | Mobility, usual activities, self-care, pain/discomfort and anxiety/depression | Intrinsic religiosity and private religious activities that draw a sense of connection to the sacred. | Spiritual resources may contribute to better QoL and health status among haemodialysis patients. |
| Nagpal et al. [ | Perceived QoL, behavioural competence, psychological status, and interpersonal environment | Prayer, meditation, and subjective ratings of religiosity | The religiosity of a caregiver for an individual with Dementia may affect the perception of QoL of the individual they are looking after. In contrast, one’s own perception of spirituality does not guarantee QoL. |
| Miller et al. [ | Emotions, confidence, self-esteem, physical health | Prayer or meditation, consequential religiosity for coping with personal problems, theological belief system, experiential religiosity pertaining to feeling of religious comfort. | The distress following a cardiac event may require support from religious behaviour and spiritual beliefs. However, if there is no such support, as shown in the results, the authors argue that lower perceptions of QoL may trigger negative forms of religious coping and put the couples at risk of spiritual distress. |
| Nguyen et al. [ | Functional status, physical health, and mental health | Self-prayer | Prayer and having a sense of connection to the sacred may be a complementary health practice among older adults since it is used more than as any other alternative health therapy. However, this position may change over time since it is not necessarily associated to QoL. |
| Ai et al. [ | Psychological functioning (behaviour coping, cognitive coping, levels of distress, anger coping, avoidant coping, depression), physical functioning (fatigue symptoms), social relationships (perceived social support). | Coping by praying in private | “Psychosocial factors may explain the potential role of using prayer for coping on short-term postoperative QoL” (p. 471). |
| Calvo et al. [ | Physical health and overall QoL (i.e. emotional health, social well-being, and spiritual and financial aspects); psychological functioning (i.e., levels of anxiety, symptoms of depression, life satisfaction) | Private/subjective religiosity | The religiosity of caregivers of patients with ALS can be a helpful coping resource for negotiating their own QoL. Hence, “Health care professionals caring for ALS patients should consider that the needs of the caregivers include religious/spiritual concerns” (p.168). |
| Kashdan & Nezlek [ | Psychological well-being, meaning in life, positive affect, self-esteem. | Daily spirituality, Personal relationship with a power greater than one’s self, the spiritual part of one’s life. | The study shows that spirituality is used as a coping strategy to deal with negative emotions. This is because the negative emotion experienced on 1 day is likely to predict increases in spirituality on the next day. |
| Nolan et al. [ | Physical health, psychological health, social relationships, environmental health. | Religious coping, being connected to God through participating in prayer groups, meetings, and religious activities, meditation, spiritual reading, religious forgiveness, spiritual connection to God, benevolent religious reappraisal | Spirituality or religious coping in the form of community prayer services and devotion to God is an important factor that may have a major impact on the treatment of patients of African-American origin with Schizophrenia. |
| Bradshaw & Kent [ | Psychological Well-Being | Attachment to God through prayer | A relationship with God makes prayer effective: the impact of prayer on one’s QoL depends on one’s perceived relationship (attachment) with God. |
| Sorensen et al. [ | Psychological wellbeing, physical health symptoms, self-image, sexuality | Seeking God’s Help. | Cancer patients in Norway are not likely to seek God’s help to negotiate their QoL. |
| Yun et al. (2012). | Physical health, psychological health. | Prayer therapy | Using mind-body interventions (e.g. prayer) may not be helpful for Korean cancer patients. |
| Levin [ | Physical health | Frequency of prayer | Religious involvement in the Synagogue is a much stronger predictor of better physical health than prayer, among Jewish people. |
| Moon & Kim [ | Physical health status, mental health status, social relationships, and the environment. | Subjective religiosity. | Subjective religiosity may account for the difference in QoL based on one’s religious background |
| Krumrei et al. [ | Physical health | Trust/mistrust in God and religious coping | “Beliefs about the Divine activate coping strategies during times of distress, which in turn impact psychological health” (p.327). Highlights spirituality as having a clinical significance in mental health among Jews |
| Lee, Nezu, & Nezu [ | Life satisfaction, Health worries, Financial worries, Medication worries, HIV mastery, Disclosure worries, Provider trust, and Sexual functioning | Spiritual connection for religious coping | Religion is an important resource for people living with HIV/AIDS |
| Currier et al. [ | Physical health, psychological health, social and environmental QoL | Spiritual functioning in terms of forgiveness of self, others, and God. | Forgiveness is an important factor to consider when modelling for spirituality and QoL. |
| Canada et al. [ | Mental functioning, physical functioning, spiritual functioning. | Feelings of comfort and strength | Faith makes an important contribution to the QoL of cancer survivors. |
| Krause et al. [ | Physical health | God image representations; intrinsic religiosity; trust in God | Spiritual/social support from fellow members of a church influences one’s perception of God as benevolent and gratitude to God, which in turn leads to better health. |
| Rohani et al. [ | Physical health | Spiritual behaviours and views that are developed through private prayer or meditation | Spirituality is not associated with QoL for Iranian women with breast cancer. |