Title:
Spiritual Beliefs, Illness Controllability and Subjective Wellbeing of Breast Cancer Patients

dc.contributor.authorPurnima Awasthi
dc.contributor.authorBithika Agrawal
dc.contributor.authorU.P. Shahi
dc.contributor.authorSanjay Saxena
dc.date.accessioned2026-02-07T11:10:44Z
dc.date.issued2022
dc.description.abstractThe present study examines the relationship of spiritual beliefs (karma or action, generosity, surrender to almighty, altruism) and illness controllability beliefs (self, doctor, supernatural) with subjective well-being and health outcomes of women patients (N = 100) suffering from breast cancer. Participants were drawn from various medical centers and hospitals located in Varanasi city. These participants were given the measures of spiritual beliefs, illness controllability beliefs, life satisfaction, and health outcomes. Analysis showed a positive association of beliefs in “Karma” and “altruism” with “life-satisfaction” and “positive health outcomes” (e.g., hope, functional wellbeing, treatment satisfaction), and negatively with “pain” and “severity” of illness. “Self” and “doctor-control” showed a positive association with “life-satisfaction”, “hope”, “functional-wellbeing”, and “treatment-satisfaction” and negative with “pain” and “severity”. Beliefs in “Karma” and ‘altruism”, and “self” and “doctor-control” emerged as significant predictors of “life-satisfaction” and “positive health outcomes” of women patients. © The Author(s). 2021 Open Access.
dc.identifier.issn0975024X
dc.identifier.urihttps://dl.bhu.ac.in/bhuir/handle/123456789/42525
dc.publisherSchool of Management Sciences
dc.subjectBreast Cancer
dc.subjectHealth Outcomes
dc.subjectIllness Controllability
dc.subjectSpiritual Beliefs
dc.subjectSubjective Wellbeing
dc.titleSpiritual Beliefs, Illness Controllability and Subjective Wellbeing of Breast Cancer Patients
dc.typePublication
dspace.entity.typeArticle

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