Beliefs about Jinn, black magic and the evil eye among Muslims: age, gender and first language influences
Beliefs about Jinn, black magic and the evil eye among Muslims: age, gender and first language influences
Mental health services in the UK have been repeatedly criticised for being insensitive to patients' religious and cultural needs. Muslims form Britain's largest ethnic minority group – nearly 3% of the UK population – yet, their health beliefs and practices remain relatively unexplored. We examined Muslims’ beliefs about Jinn, black magic and the evil eye and whether believed affliction by these supernatural entities could cause physical or mental health problems and also whether doctors, religious leaders, or both should treat this. A self-report questionnaire was given to a convenience sample of Muslims aged 18 years and over (n=111). The majority of the sample believed in the existence of Jinn, black magic and the evil eye and approximately half of them stated that these could cause physical and mental health problems and that these problems should be treated by both doctors and religious figures. Our results highlight an important area that demands attention from providers of health care.
jinn, black magic, evil eye, muslims, trans-cultural psychiatry, supernatural, culture and mental health
68-77
Khalifa, Najat
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Hardie, Tim
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Latif, Shahid
159e4451-4175-4cc8-9ac1-4900eb30619d
Jamil, Imran
ec059f36-3743-4f5a-844f-e68d3f284e0c
Walker, Dawn-Marie
5d4c78b7-4411-493e-8844-b64efc72a1e8
May 2011
Khalifa, Najat
73dd3d99-5e90-46a7-addb-47818e1636d5
Hardie, Tim
6bb1a50f-5359-4ff0-8471-0e508e169622
Latif, Shahid
159e4451-4175-4cc8-9ac1-4900eb30619d
Jamil, Imran
ec059f36-3743-4f5a-844f-e68d3f284e0c
Walker, Dawn-Marie
5d4c78b7-4411-493e-8844-b64efc72a1e8
Khalifa, Najat, Hardie, Tim, Latif, Shahid, Jamil, Imran and Walker, Dawn-Marie
(2011)
Beliefs about Jinn, black magic and the evil eye among Muslims: age, gender and first language influences.
International Journal of Culture and Mental Health, 4 (1), .
(doi:10.1080/17542863.2010.503051).
Abstract
Mental health services in the UK have been repeatedly criticised for being insensitive to patients' religious and cultural needs. Muslims form Britain's largest ethnic minority group – nearly 3% of the UK population – yet, their health beliefs and practices remain relatively unexplored. We examined Muslims’ beliefs about Jinn, black magic and the evil eye and whether believed affliction by these supernatural entities could cause physical or mental health problems and also whether doctors, religious leaders, or both should treat this. A self-report questionnaire was given to a convenience sample of Muslims aged 18 years and over (n=111). The majority of the sample believed in the existence of Jinn, black magic and the evil eye and approximately half of them stated that these could cause physical and mental health problems and that these problems should be treated by both doctors and religious figures. Our results highlight an important area that demands attention from providers of health care.
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Published date: May 2011
Keywords:
jinn, black magic, evil eye, muslims, trans-cultural psychiatry, supernatural, culture and mental health
Organisations:
Faculty of Health Sciences
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Local EPrints ID: 372883
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/372883
ISSN: 1754-2863
PURE UUID: 0b1b1af3-3cef-40bc-a8c2-20f2d2798018
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Date deposited: 22 Dec 2014 10:16
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:51
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Author:
Najat Khalifa
Author:
Tim Hardie
Author:
Shahid Latif
Author:
Imran Jamil
Author:
Dawn-Marie Walker
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