Slow and Steady But Not Related to HIV Stigma: Physical Activity in South Africans Living with HIV and Chronic Pain
- PMID: 36436140
- DOI: 10.1007/s10461-022-03928-7
Slow and Steady But Not Related to HIV Stigma: Physical Activity in South Africans Living with HIV and Chronic Pain
Abstract
HIV stigma may influence physical activity in people living with HIV (PLWH) and chronic pain. We prospectively examined the relationship between stigma, activity and chronic pain in a convenience sample of PLWH initiating antiretroviral therapy in an inner-city clinic in Johannesburg, South Africa. Participants wore accelerometers to measure daily duration and intensity of activity for 2 weeks. Stigma was assessed with the Revised HIV Stigma Scale. Participants [n = 81, 89% female, age mean (SD) 42 (8)] were active for a median of 7 h daily (IQR 5.2, 9.2), but at very low intensity, equivalent to a slow walk [median (IQR): 0.39 m s-1 (0.33, 0.50)]. Duration and intensity of activity was not associated with stigma, even after controlling for age, self-assessed wealth, pain intensity and willingness to engage in physical activity (p-values > 0.05). As stigma did not associate with greater activity, drivers of sustained activity in South African PLWH remain unclear.
El estigma del VIH puede influir en la actividad física de las personas que viven con el VIH (PVVS) y el dolor crónico. Se examinó prospectivamente la relación entre el estigma, la actividad y el dolor crónico en una muestra de conveniencia de PVVS que iniciaba la terapia antirretroviral en una clínica del centro de la ciudad en Johannesburgo, Sudáfrica. Los participantes usaron acelerómetros para medir la duración diaria y la intensidad de la actividad durante dos semanas. El estigma se evaluó con la escala revisada de estigma del VIH. Los participantes [n = 81, 89% mujeres, media de edad (SD) 42 (8)] tenían una actividad de intensidad muy baja, para una mediana de siete horas diarias (IQR 5.2, 9.2), pero, equivalente a una marcha lenta [mediana (IQR): 0.39 m s−1 (0.33, 0.50)]. La duración y la intensidad de la actividad no se asociaron con los niveles de estigma, incluso después de controlar la edad, la riqueza autoevaluada, la intensidad del dolor y la voluntad de participar en la actividad física (valores de p > 0.05). Como el estigma no se asoció con una mayor actividad, los impulsores de la actividad sostenida en las PVVS sudafricanas siguen sin estar claros.
Keywords: Africa; HIV; Pain; Physical activity; Stigma.
© 2022. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.
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