# Associations of Yoga as a Mind–Body Exercise and Its Components with Spiritual and Subjective Well-Being: Cross-Sectional Evidence for Potential Distress Prevention

**Authors:** Orsolya Cseh, Vera Klier, István Karsai, Henriett Nagy, Gusztáv József Tornóczky

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/sports14010013 · Sports · 2026-01-04

## TL;DR

This study shows that regular yoga practice is linked to higher spiritual and mental well-being in adults.

## Contribution

The study empirically explores how specific yoga components relate to spiritual and subjective well-being.

## Key findings

- All four yoga components positively affect spiritual well-being with medium-sized effects.
- Yoga components show small but significant effects on subjective well-being.
- Strongest effects were found in the Personal and Transcendental dimensions of spirituality.

## Abstract

Yoga is increasingly practiced worldwide and is associated with diverse physical and mental health benefits, yet its spiritual dimensions remain underexplored in empirical research. This study investigated the relationship between the weekly frequency of practicing specific yoga components and levels of spiritual well-being and subjective well-being (SuWB). A total of 335 Hungarian adults (mean age = 47.2 ± 10.5 years) with an average of 10.2 ± 7.9 years of yoga experience completed a national online survey. Spiritual well-being (SpWB) was measured using the Spiritual Health and Life-Orientation Measure (SHALOM), and SuWB was assessed with the WHO-5 Well-Being Index. Statistical analyses included ANCOVA, Kruskal–Wallis H tests with post hoc Mann–Whitney U tests, and Kendall’s tau correlations. All four yoga components (āsanas, prāṇāyāma, relaxation, meditation) showed medium-sized positive main effects on SpWB (p < 0.001; η2 = 0.06–0.09) and small but significant effects on SuWB (p = 0.003–0.05; η2 = 0.03–0.04). The strongest effects were observed in the Personal and Transcendental dimensions of spirituality. Weak to moderate positive correlations were found between SuWB and the four SHALOM factors as well as the total SHALOM score. These findings indicate that regular engagement in diverse yoga practices is associated with higher levels of both spiritual connection and mental well-being, highlighting that yoga practice is associated with higher levels of spiritual connection and mental well-being, and may be relevant for mental health promotion.

## Full-text entities

- **Chemicals:** asanas (MESH:C017690), pranayama (-)

## Full text

_Full body text omitted from this summary view._ Fetch the complete paper as Markdown: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12845600/full.md

## References

86 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12845600/full.md

---
Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12845600