The main purpose of this study is to explore the relationship between fortune-telling attitude and mental health, and to use self-efficacy as a moderating variable to examine the correlation between self-efficacy, fortune-telling attitude and mental health. The subjects of the research were convenience sampling, and the subjects were adults over 18 years old. They were administered the "Fortune Telling Attitude Scale", "Short Form Health Scale", "Chinese Happiness Scale (Short Version)" and "General Self-efficacy scale Chinese version" and other four scales. The purpose of this study is as follows: 1. To explore the relationship between fortune-telling attitude and mental health. 2. Explore the relationship between self-efficacy and mental health. 3. Explore the relationship between self-efficacy regulating fortune-telling experience and mental health. After collecting the data, statistical analysis was performed using methods such as descriptive statistics, t-test, single-factor analysis of variation, Pearson product-difference correlation, and multiple regression analysis to facilitate testing of hypotheses.
The results of the study show that fortune-telling attitude is negatively correlated with mental health. In this study, the Short Form Health Scale and the Chinese Happiness (Short Version) were used as tools to assess the mental health of the participants. Although the fortune-telling attitude and these two scales were All showed a negative correlation, but only the simple health quantity expressed a statistically significant level. The first hypothesis of this study, "There is a negative correlation between fortune-telling attitude and mental health" was supported by the research results. Self-efficacy is positively correlated with mental health, and has statistically significant differences with the Short Form Health Scale and the Chinese Happiness Scale (short version); the second hypothesis of this study is "Self-efficacy is positively correlated with mental health." Get support from research results. The study found that self-efficacy does not significantly regulate fortune-telling attitudes and mental health. The hypothesis of this study that "for people with high self-efficacy, the negative correlation between fortune-telling attitudes and mental health is lower than for people with low self-efficacy" was not supported by the research results.