Original Research

Religious beliefs in public administration and behaviour surrounding abortion decriminalisation in COVID-19 era

Cruz García Lirios, Gilberto Bermúdez-Ruíz, Tirso Javier Hernandez Gracia, Juan Mansilla Sepúlveda, Victor Hugo Meriño Cordoba, Claudia Huaiquián Billeke
HTS Teologiese Studies / Theological Studies | Vol 79, No 1 | a8830 | DOI: https://doi.org/10.4102/hts.v79i1.8830 | © 2023 Cruz García Lirios, Gilberto Bermúdez-Ruíz, Tirso Javier Hernandez Gracia, Juan Mansilla Sepúlveda, Victor Hugo Meriño Cordoba, Claudia Huaiquián Billeke | This work is licensed under CC Attribution 4.0
Submitted: 05 April 2023 | Published: 28 July 2023

About the author(s)

Cruz García Lirios, School of Huehuetoca, México University, Huehuetoca, Mexico
Gilberto Bermúdez-Ruíz, School of Coyoacan, Anahuac University, Coyoacan, Mexico
Tirso Javier Hernandez Gracia, School of Hidalgo, Hidalgo University, Hidalgo, Mexico
Juan Mansilla Sepúlveda, Faculty of Education, Catholic University of Temuco, Temuco, Chile
Victor Hugo Meriño Cordoba, School of Amigo, Amigo University, Antioquia, Colombia
Claudia Huaiquián Billeke, Faculty of Education, Catholic University of Temuco, Temuco, Chile

Abstract

In the context of reproductive health, policies focused on decriminalising abortion that resulted in religious beliefs, attitudes and behaviours being affected. The main purpose of this article was to identify the religious beliefs of abortion in the emergency situations such as COVID-19. Although there is no general consensus regarding abortion, there is almost ‘general opposition to causing harm to life’ in most religions. In the current study, 28 indicators and four factors (seven for each factor) related to pregnancy termination were explored through an exploratory factor structure. The study was therefore non-experimental, cross-sectional and exploratory, with 100 students selected in a non-probabilistic way.

Contribution: The main contribution of this research is to find the variable effects on abortion in emergency conditions regarding religious beliefs. Given the results, behavioural intentions determine a structural model, but religious beliefs explain the solution. Furthermore, data generalisation is not possible due to the context, sample selection and type of analysis. In the local population, a confirmatory factor analysis should be performed with a probabilistic sample selection.


Keywords

intentions; abortion; religious beliefs; attitudes; COVID-19.

Sustainable Development Goal

Goal 3: Good health and well-being

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