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How Do You Know That? Beliefs and Your Health - Handout

Reflecting on what informs your beliefs

If you don’t stand for something you will fall for anything.

-Gordon A. Eadie

Do my beliefs affect my health?

Absolutely! Beliefs affect your health in many ways. Here are some examples.

  • Believing you have a life purpose makes a difference. A study of over 7100 people asked them a number of questions and then followed their health over 14 years.1 The people who had a strong sense of purpose—a reason for getting up each day—lived longer. This was true for people of all ages, for both men and women, and even when they accounted for depression or other mental health issues.
  • What you expect to happen will affect health. In one study, patients with pain were either told by a doctor they were getting pain medication, or the medicine was just added to their IV line behind a curtain, so they would not know.2 The people who knew had a much faster drop in their pain. The reverse was also true. If they were told the pain medicine was turned off, their pain came back much faster than if the medication was stopped without their being told. This tells us that the mind has a lot of power when it comes to what we believe about pain.
  • Your beliefs guide your health choices. People may become very attached to their treatments. Some people rely on “complementary approaches.” Some people have more confidence in medications than in other treatments, while others prefer to manage their health more with diet and exercise.
  • Having healthy spiritual beliefs seems to make you healthier. For example, we know that people who attend weekly spiritual gatherings or say they are ‘highly religious’ live longer.3 This does not just seem to be tied just to healthier habits, like less smoking or drinking, or to the health benefits of being around other people.


Keywords:
integrative health, whole health, spiritual health, spirit and soul, meaning and purpose, epistemology, philosophy, beliefs, media, research, bias, faith, religion, mindful awareness 
Doc ID:
150512
Owned by:
Sara A. in Osher Center for Integrative Health
Created:
2025-05-09
Updated:
2025-05-22
Sites:
Osher Center for Integrative Health