| Literature DB >> 34408712 |
Barbara Csala1,2, Constanze Maria Springinsfeld3, Ferenc Köteles2.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Both yoga practice and spirituality are associated with beneficial mental health outcomes. Within yoga research, however, spirituality is still a widely neglected area. The present systematic review aims to explore empirical studies, which do, in fact, investigate the relationship between yoga and spirituality in order to provide an overview and future directions for research on this topic. The review examines whether available empirical research supports an association between yoga practice and spirituality and, if so, which specific aspects of spirituality are associated with yoga practice.Entities:
Keywords: aspects of spirituality; health; spirituality; well-being; yoga
Year: 2021 PMID: 34408712 PMCID: PMC8365182 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2021.695939
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
FIGURE 1Selection of studies based on the PRISMA method.
Summary of the articles with qualitative approach.
| Article | Design | Sample size (yoga group) | Control group(s) | Sample condition, age, gender | Measurement tool | Type of yoga practice | Frequency of intervention/previous yoga experience | Major findings | Origin of the study |
| Cross-sectional | No | Regular yoga practitioners from yoga and fitness centers; mean age: NR, age between 23 and 62 years; 100% female | 15-min recorded phone interview: how yoga practice affected spirituality, and how spirituality affected eating and body image attitudes | NR (postural yoga) | Average number of years of yoga practice: 12.1; at least 1 h/week | Positive changes in sense of spirituality; | United States | ||
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| Longitudinal | No | Prisoners (time spent in prison | Surveys ( | Holistic program: Kundalini yoga based physical practice, and suggestion for yoga philosophy literature P, B, R, M, RB, Ma | ”yoga quarantine”: 40 days, 2–3 h/day; “yoga intensive”: 2 months, 2 h/three times a week | Yoga is different from other form of movements: | Europe (Spain) | |
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| Cross-sectional | No, but compared to data of general United Kingdom population | Regular Iyengar yoga practitioners; mean age: 47 years; 84% female | 17 pages long questionnaire: multiple choice, Likert scale questions and qualitative comments on aspects of yoga practice which are not directly relevant to spirituality, reasons why people begin and continue to practice yoga, perceived effects of yoga | Iyengar yoga (postural yoga) | Number of years of yoga practice: between 11 and 15; Average amount of yoga practice: 1 class/week + home practice 3–5 h/week | Long-term practitioners are no more likely to have a spiritual interest in their practice than beginners; | Europe (United Kingdom) | |
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| Cross-sectional | No | Regular vinyasa yoga practitioners; mean age: NR; gender: NR | Loosely structured interviews with a focus on motivational factors for yoga practice | Vinyasa yoga (postural yoga) | NR | Enmeshed social, psychological, physical and spiritual meanings and motivations to continue yoga practice; | United States | |
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| Cross-sectional | No | Yoga instructors; mean age: NR; 82% female | In-depth, semi-structured interviews about the traditional spirituality of yoga | Trained yoga teachers in various hatha yoga styles | NR | Lack of spirituality in westernized yoga; importance of meditation and yoga philosophy for spiritual progress; practice is the key to entering into yoga spirituality | United States | |
| Longitudinal | No | Auroville spiritual community residents; Post intervention mean age: 44 years; 31,6% female | In-depth interview: open-ended questions about life and existence, aspirations, fears and anxieties, and spiritual experiences | Integral yoga of Sri Aurobindo LS | 10 years, NR | Increased level of existential thinking, spiritual inclinations and integrative worldview after 10 years of residence; | India | ||
| Longitudinal | Patients with symptomatic paroxysmal atrial fibrillation; mean age: 63.5 years; 41.6% female | Individual semi-structured interviews on how participants experienced therapeutic yoga | MediYoga (therapeutic yoga derived from Kundalini yoga) P, R, M | 12 weeks, weekly 1 h + encouraged to perform MediYoga at home with CD-record | Yoga participants’ perceptions and experiences: (1) A sense of existence and presence – experience of more inner peace, (2) Increased awareness of connection of physical and mental functions | Europe (Sweden) |
Summary of the articles between 2020 and 2021 (all with quantitative approach).
| Article | Design | Sample size (yoga group) | Control group(s) | Sample condition, age, gender | Measurement tool | Type of yoga practice | Frequency of intervention/previous experience with yoga | Major findings | Origin of the study |
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| Longitudinal | No | Patients with a current diagnosis of a mild or moderate depressive episode; mean age: NR; 88% female | Aspects of Spirituality (ASP; | Meditation Based Lifestyle Modification (MBLM) - a complex mind-body intervention: P, B, R, M LS, RB, L (yama, niyama emphasized), Ma | 8 weeks, weekly 3-h class + 45 min daily home practice recommended | Increase in Search for Insight/wisdom, but no changes in the other 3 subscales at the end of the intervention | Europe (Germany) | |
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| Longitudinal | No | Cancer survivors; mean age: 61 years; 87.5% female | FACIT-Sp ( | Gentle yoga and mindfulness meditation: P, B, R, M | 10 weeks; 45 min classes two times/week | Increased spiritual well-being at the end of the intervention; increased levels of meaning and faith, but no changes in peace; reported spiritual perceptions: peaceful, tranquil, opportunity for prayer, spiritually connected | USA | |
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| Cross-sectional | No | Regular yoga practitioners; mean age: 49 years; 89% female | Interpretation of yoga; Yama/Niyama Questionnaire (YaNiQ; | Various forms of yoga: 88% Yoga Vidya | Average number of years of yoga practice: 13, Average amount of yoga practice 55% several times/week; 31% daily; 11% once/week, 3% less than once/week | Yoga as a spiritual path for 78%; Participants’ perspectives on their practice whether it is seen as gymnastics or spiritual path influence yama/niyama scores: participants regarding yoga as a spiritual path have higher scores for (1) Devotion/Self-Reflection/Contentment, (2) Restrain/Truthfulness/Self-Discipline, and (3) Non-Possessiveness, but not for (4) Non-Harming | Europe (Germany) | |
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| Cross-sectional | No | Adult United Kingdom residents practicing yoga within the previous 12 months; mean age: 48.7 years; 87.3% female | Motivation for yoga practice | Various forms of hatha yoga | Average number of years of yoga practice: 13.9; Average amount of yoga practice: 5.52 h/week | Initial reasons were general wellness (39%), fitness (19%) and flexibility (8.5%); most notable change in spirituality over time: recent spiritual motivation 21% | Europe (United Kingdom) | |
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| Longitudinal | Beginner female students; mean age: 22 years, 100% female | Spiritual Connection Questionnaire (SCQ-14; | Beginner hatha yoga; Sport group: P, B, R; Spiritual group: P, B, R, Phi, Ma | 10 weeks; weekly 1.5 h class, no home practice | No differences between the two yoga groups; Increased spiritual connection in the merged yoga group compared to control at the end of the intervention | Europe (Hungary) | ||
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| Interventional | No | Regular yoga practitioners (average number of years of yoga practice: 7.1); mean age: 40 years; 78% female | Psychological resources: Self-Transcendence Subscale of the Temperament and Character Inventory (STS; | 11 forms of hatha yoga: included components measured by Essential Properties of Yoga Questionnaire (EPYQ; | 1-h long single yoga session | Increased self-transcendence and spiritual peace after yoga class independently of style; both changes in self-transcendence and spiritual peace favorably correlated with changes in emotions; higher levels of warmth and friendliness of the yoga teacher correlate with increased self-transcendence | United States |