Subjective Quality of Life, Religiousness, and Spiritual Experience in Greek Orthodox Christians: Data from Healthy Aging and Patients with Cardiovascular Disease

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Abstract

The goal of this study is to examine subjective quality of life-life satisfaction, religiousness, and spiritual experience in healthy younger and older adults, as well as in older patients suffering from severe cardiovascular disease, while examining the role of marital status, employment and socioeconomic status, existence of social network, urbanicity, education, depression, and personal opinion about the country’s current socioeconomic situation. Results revealed that there are no age differences and that the role of demographic variables as predictors of religiousness, spiritual experience, and quality of life-life satisfaction don’t seem to be very strong. Marital status, employment, and religiousness moderately predict quality of life-life satisfaction. Quality of life-life satisfaction, religiousness, and spirituality are not strongly interconnected in this Greek Orthodox Christian sample. Future cross-cultural research should further investigate the role of other psychological and social parameters that may have a stronger predictive role in quality of life of older adults.

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Giannoulis, K., & Giannouli, V. (2020). Subjective Quality of Life, Religiousness, and Spiritual Experience in Greek Orthodox Christians: Data from Healthy Aging and Patients with Cardiovascular Disease. In Advances in Experimental Medicine and Biology (Vol. 1196, pp. 85–91). Springer. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-32637-1_8

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