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. 2022 Sep 6;10(25):8816–8826. doi: 10.12998/wjcc.v10.i25.8816

Table 2.

Results on potential influence of religious coping on people with diabetes

Refs
Study objectives
Method/sample
Results
Amadi et al[5] To assess the association between religiosity and coping style with the outcome of depression and diabetes 112 participants with diabetes and an equal number with depression consecutively, matching for gender High intrinsic and extrinsic religiosities are likely to be associated with positive coping skills and better treatment outcome in patients with depression or diabetes
Darvyri et al[6] To evaluate the impact of spirituality/religiosity on T2DM management PubΜed was searched thoroughly for relevant papers A positive relationship between religiosity/spirituality and improved T2DM management
Saffari et al[9] To investigate the impact of religiosity on medication adherence and HRQoL 793 adults (> 65 yr, 45% female) were recruited from four diabetes care centers and followed for one year Religious coping and social support were recognized as the significant mediators between religiosity and medication adherence
Sukarno et al[48] To explore the meaning of religiousness on diabetes management among T2DM patients Selecting a concept, determining the analysis purpose, identifying a model case, investigating attributes, antecedents, and consequences, as well as defining empirical referents Attributes of religiousness have a role in DM care management context, including religious belief, religious practice, religious support, and religious coping
Newton et al[50] To examine the role of specific religious beliefs in the coping process Sample of 103 parents of children with disabilities Loss appraisal mediated the relation of vertical focus and God image with engagement coping. The appraisal that God is in control further explained the link between vertical focus and engagement coping
Nasirzadeh et al[55] To evaluate the relationship between religious beliefs and coping strategies in students at Shiraz University 251 college students were selected by using a stratified random sampling procedure. Carver’s coping strategies questionnaire and Gorsuch's God concept scale were used for data collection Problem-focused coping strategy correlated positively with the benevolent, Omni-ness, valuable God concept and negatively with the irrelevant, punishing, distinctness God concept
Korsah et al[56] To explore the spiritual coping experiences of patients with diabetes mellitus in a Ghanaian hospital The hermeneutic phenomenological approach to qualitative research was employed. Data were audio-recorded from both type 1 and 2 diabetes patients through one-on-one interviews As noted by diabetes patients from their spiritual coping encounters, a disturbing experience was the exploitation and abuse in the form of fasting and over-starving by their spiritual healers in the deception of healing diabetes
Choi et al[51] To explore how religion and spirituality impacted attitudes about self-management practices among African Americans with homelessness histories. To understand resilience in diabetes care practices Qualitative semi-structured face-to-face interviews were conducted with 42 African Americans > 18 yr Findings emphasized the importance of spirituality, religious beliefs, and coping strategies in diabetes self-care activities
Yazla et al[53] To investigate the relationship of religious beliefs and forgiveness in diabetic patients with various socio-demographic characteristics, emotional problems, and glycemic control Comprise 100 patients diagnosed with T2DM. Data collection form, the Scale of Forgiveness and Religiosity, Problem Areas in Diabetes Scale, Beck Depression Inventory, State-Trait Anxiety Inventory and the Audit of Diabetes-Dependent Quality of Life were used A statistically significant relationship between the scores of the State-Trait Anxiety Inventory and the religious belief scales; forgiveness scale points; and the Beck Depression Inventory
How et al[54] To determine the relationships between religiosity, religions, and glycemic control of T2DM A cross-sectional study conducted at an urban, university-based, teaching outpatient clinic Religiosity had a negative correlation with lower FPG but no correlation was found with hemoglobin A1c

T2DM: Type 2 diabetes mellitus; DM: Diabetes mellitus; HRQoL: Health-related quality of life; FPG: Fasting plasma glucose.