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1.
J Relig Health ; 61(3): 2417-2432, 2022 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32494891

ABSTRACT

Why people seek help is a question shared by both health psychologists and scholars of spiritual healing. This overlap, however, has gone unexplored. This article shows convergence between health help-seeking behaviours in spiritual healing and secular professional health services. It does so by drawing on the archival records from the Panacea Society in Bedford, England, which began an international healing ministry by post-amassing over 120,000 correspondents from 93 different countries. Archives from the Panacea Society's Healing Department containing records of the self-reported effects of the prescribed water-taking healing ritual were used to investigate variables related to help-seeking for health problems through spiritual healing. A sample of over 10% of the available records (n = 7192) contained data from 40,627 letters written over a 73-year period from 48 different countries. In line with research from health psychology, and specifically the Health Belief Model, findings showed that those who were older, female, and receiving perceived benefits from treatment were more likely to engage in help-seeking.


Subject(s)
Help-Seeking Behavior , Spiritual Therapies , England , Female , Humans
2.
PLoS One ; 16(1): e0242546, 2021.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33503054

ABSTRACT

Religious rituals are associated with health benefits, potentially produced via social bonding. It is unknown whether secular rituals similarly increase social bonding. We conducted a field study with individuals who celebrate secular rituals at Sunday Assemblies and compared them with participants attending Christian rituals. We assessed levels of social bonding and affect before and after the rituals. Results showed the increase in social bonding taking place in secular rituals is comparable to religious rituals. We also found that both sets of rituals increased positive affect and decreased negative affect, and that the change in positive affect predicted the change in social bonding observed. Together these results suggest that secular rituals might play a similar role to religious ones in fostering feelings of social connection and boosting positive affect.


Subject(s)
Ceremonial Behavior , Social Behavior , Adult , Christianity , Humans , Linear Models
3.
Cogn Emot ; 25(8): 1341-8, 2011 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22136084

ABSTRACT

In the 25 years since its foundation, Cognition and Emotion has become a leading psychological journal of research on emotion. Here we review some of the ways in which this has occurred. Questions have included how parallel systems of cognition and emotion can operate in emotion regulation and psychological therapies (including the issue of free will), how the cognitive approach to emotion works, how emotion affects attention, memory, and decision making, and how emotion research is moving beyond the individual mind into the space of the interpersonal.


Subject(s)
Cognition , Emotions , Periodicals as Topic/trends , Psychology/history , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , History, Ancient , Humans , Interpersonal Relations , Psychotherapy
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