Healthcare Utilization and Perceived Health Status among Falun Gong Practitioners in Taiwan
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Published:2020
Issue:6
Volume:7
Page:511-531
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ISSN:2326-4403
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Container-title:Health Behavior and Policy Review
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language:
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Short-container-title:Health Behav Policy Rev
Author:
Hu Yu-Whuei, ,Huang Li-Shan,Yeh Eric,He Mai
Abstract
Objective: Falun Gong (FLG) is a practice of mind and body focusing on moral character improvement that includes meditative exercises. In this study, we explored perceived health status, healthcare resource utilization, and related factors among Taiwanese FLG practitioners, compared to themselves before practicing FLG, and also to the general Taiwanese norm, as reported by the 2001 National Health Interview Survey (NHIS). Methods: This cross-sectional study was based on a voluntary, paper-based survey conducted from October 2002 to February 2003 using the same Taiwanese SF-36 instrument employed by the NHIS. Primary outcomes included 8 SF-36 domain scores and the number of outpatient visits. One-sample t-tests, oneway ANOVA, and multivariate linear regression analyses were used. Results: The response rate was 75.6% (1210/1600). Compared to the norm, the study cohort had significantly higher scores in 6 of 8 SF-36 domains across sex and age (p < .05). Among those with chronic diseases, 70% to 89% reported that their conditions were improved or cured. Additionally, 74.2% and 79.2% participants stopped drinking alcohol and quit smoking; 62.7% reported decreased outpatient visits (mean before = 11.96; mean after = 5.87; norm = 14.4). Conclusions: In this cohort, FLG participants had higher perceived health scores than the population norm and reduced outpatient visits than before practice.
Publisher
Paris Scholar Publishing
Subject
Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Health Policy,Health(social science)