What Can Be Learned from Health-Related Tensions and Disparities in Ultra-Orthodox Jewish Families?

Promoting healthy lifestyle from early childhood is a key objective in public health, yet health behaviors are often culturally driven, especially in closed-religious communities. This study aims to reveal key cultural-religious aspects of attitudes and behaviors regarding lifestyle in one such clos...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of religion and health 2018-06, Vol.57 (3), p.1133-1145
Hauptverfasser: Peles, Chagit, Rudolf, Mary, Weingarten, Michael, Bentwich, Miriam Ethel
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container_title Journal of religion and health
container_volume 57
creator Peles, Chagit
Rudolf, Mary
Weingarten, Michael
Bentwich, Miriam Ethel
description Promoting healthy lifestyle from early childhood is a key objective in public health, yet health behaviors are often culturally driven, especially in closed-religious communities. This study aims to reveal key cultural-religious aspects of attitudes and behaviors regarding lifestyle in one such closed community—the ultra-orthodox Jewish community. In-depth interviews were conducted with 20 participants: religious leaders, educational figures, psycho-medical professionals from two major ultra-orthodox communities in Israel. A thematic analysis was used to reveal key themes in the interviews. We found tensions between conflicting themes in the parenting, nutrition and physical activity domains, while the sleep domain illustrated cultural solution for a tension. By illuminating the perceptional components of lifestyle, the study contributes to better foundations of health promotion in closed-religious communities.
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subjects Aging
Attitude to Health
Child
Clinical Psychology
Families & family life
Female
Health Behavior
Healthy Lifestyle
Humans
Interviews as Topic
Israel
Jewish culture
Jews - psychology
Judaism
Learning
Lifestyles
Medicine
Medicine & Public Health
Original Paper
Public Health
Religious orthodoxy
Religious Studies
title What Can Be Learned from Health-Related Tensions and Disparities in Ultra-Orthodox Jewish Families?
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