Experiences and impact of chronic pain in South Africans living in a rural area: a qualitative study
Experiences and impact of chronic pain in South Africans living in a rural area: a qualitative study
Objectives: previous work in South Africans living with HIV and chronic pain has raised questions regarding maintained levels of physical activity while in pain, patterns of pain disclosure and recruitment of social support. Recent data suggest that pain in people living with HIV may be more due to issues of poverty rather than HIV. We explored how South Africans with chronic pain living in a rural area: (1) understand and experience chronic pain, (2) how chronic pain affects activity levels and (3) the relationship between pain disclosure and social support.
Design: we conducted a qualitative study using in-depth interviews. Transcripts were analysed using thematic data analysis.
Setting: the Ndlovu Care Group Research Centre in the rural Elandsdoorn, Dennilton area in Limpopo province, South Africa, between April and July 2019.
Participants: 34 individuals (19 women, 15 men) with a mean age of 37 years (SD 8) living with chronic pain, half of whom were living with HIV, and half without.
Results: perceived causes of pain included illness or injury, ‘thinking too much’ and non-Western perspectives. Three patterns of activity in response to chronic pain emerged: perseverance, reduced activity and complete inactivity. Reasons for perseverance included fear of losing income, perceived social stigma or no social support. Patterns of pain disclosure included full, selective (telling some people but not others depending on their perceived trustworthiness), partial (sharing pain presence but not how severe it was) and non-disclosure. Disclosing pain was common in women and was used to recruit practical support. Men rarely disclosed to recruit support, and if they did, would recruit for financial support. Disclosing pain was also a strategy to avoid the social stigma of being labelled ‘lazy’. Patterns of activity, disclosure and type of support recruited did not differ between those with and without HIV.
Conclusions: our findings suggest that activity levels, disclosure and recruitment of support in South Africans living with chronic pain are influenced by low income, social stigma and gender, rather than HIV.
Africa South of the Sahara, Chronic Pain, HIV & AIDS, Social Support
Mulaudzi, Mamakiri
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Ratshinanga, Andani
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Mohale, John
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Ramoshai, Tebatso
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Evangeli, Michael
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Pincus, Tamar
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Parker, Romy
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Umunnakwe, Chijioke N
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Tempelman, Hugo
bce3cedd-4acb-4249-8ada-c1eefd07ac6d
Wadley, Antonia
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24 December 2025
Mulaudzi, Mamakiri
507ab9d8-b785-4f9a-a6b8-26e775c15865
Ratshinanga, Andani
6d84be03-5012-4cfd-8e14-736a88463ea9
Mohale, John
3dd41ef4-8860-44bf-b5b2-28d311f8a12d
Ramoshai, Tebatso
31831587-11f5-4d42-8ca4-b54724f79cdd
Evangeli, Michael
d075d96e-8977-4156-81f3-4da6cb4ed241
Pincus, Tamar
55388347-5d71-4fc0-9fd2-66fbba080e0c
Parker, Romy
ce2d3122-fd44-4930-97c6-9148f4cdcd1c
Umunnakwe, Chijioke N
99b53bb7-6f0f-4594-b3e8-227fbadeb36b
Tempelman, Hugo
bce3cedd-4acb-4249-8ada-c1eefd07ac6d
Wadley, Antonia
706414e5-e086-4b2b-8009-d446863f3eb1
Mulaudzi, Mamakiri, Ratshinanga, Andani, Mohale, John, Ramoshai, Tebatso, Evangeli, Michael, Pincus, Tamar, Parker, Romy, Umunnakwe, Chijioke N, Tempelman, Hugo and Wadley, Antonia
(2025)
Experiences and impact of chronic pain in South Africans living in a rural area: a qualitative study.
BMJ Open, 15 (12), [e103307].
(doi:10.1136/bmjopen-2025-103307).
Abstract
Objectives: previous work in South Africans living with HIV and chronic pain has raised questions regarding maintained levels of physical activity while in pain, patterns of pain disclosure and recruitment of social support. Recent data suggest that pain in people living with HIV may be more due to issues of poverty rather than HIV. We explored how South Africans with chronic pain living in a rural area: (1) understand and experience chronic pain, (2) how chronic pain affects activity levels and (3) the relationship between pain disclosure and social support.
Design: we conducted a qualitative study using in-depth interviews. Transcripts were analysed using thematic data analysis.
Setting: the Ndlovu Care Group Research Centre in the rural Elandsdoorn, Dennilton area in Limpopo province, South Africa, between April and July 2019.
Participants: 34 individuals (19 women, 15 men) with a mean age of 37 years (SD 8) living with chronic pain, half of whom were living with HIV, and half without.
Results: perceived causes of pain included illness or injury, ‘thinking too much’ and non-Western perspectives. Three patterns of activity in response to chronic pain emerged: perseverance, reduced activity and complete inactivity. Reasons for perseverance included fear of losing income, perceived social stigma or no social support. Patterns of pain disclosure included full, selective (telling some people but not others depending on their perceived trustworthiness), partial (sharing pain presence but not how severe it was) and non-disclosure. Disclosing pain was common in women and was used to recruit practical support. Men rarely disclosed to recruit support, and if they did, would recruit for financial support. Disclosing pain was also a strategy to avoid the social stigma of being labelled ‘lazy’. Patterns of activity, disclosure and type of support recruited did not differ between those with and without HIV.
Conclusions: our findings suggest that activity levels, disclosure and recruitment of support in South Africans living with chronic pain are influenced by low income, social stigma and gender, rather than HIV.
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e103307.full
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Accepted/In Press date: 12 December 2025
e-pub ahead of print date: 24 December 2025
Published date: 24 December 2025
Keywords:
Africa South of the Sahara, Chronic Pain, HIV & AIDS, Social Support
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 507999
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/507999
ISSN: 2044-6055
PURE UUID: b9c80abf-f886-46cc-aed6-0c66595bf6e1
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Date deposited: 09 Jan 2026 17:40
Last modified: 17 Jan 2026 03:26
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Contributors
Author:
Mamakiri Mulaudzi
Author:
Andani Ratshinanga
Author:
John Mohale
Author:
Tebatso Ramoshai
Author:
Michael Evangeli
Author:
Tamar Pincus
Author:
Romy Parker
Author:
Chijioke N Umunnakwe
Author:
Hugo Tempelman
Author:
Antonia Wadley
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