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Transitioning to a life with disability in rural South Africa: A qualitative study
Author(s) -
Marubini Christinah Sadiki,
Brian Watermeyer,
Nina Abrahams
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
african journal of disability
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.301
H-Index - 8
eISSN - 2226-7220
pISSN - 2223-9170
DOI - 10.4102/ajod.v10i0.697
Subject(s) - disadvantage , poverty , social model of disability , psychology , identity (music) , prejudice (legal term) , qualitative research , face (sociological concept) , social psychology , set (abstract data type) , sociology , gender studies , political science , social science , aesthetics , psychiatry , law , philosophy , computer science , programming language
Background Adjustment to the onset of disability has complex reverberations relating to both socially engendered disadvantage and the realities of functional limitation. Pre-existing ways of understanding disability can meaningfully shape this experience. Objective This study aimed to provide an exploratory understanding of the experience of becoming disabled in a low-income, under-served, rural South African community. In particular, it was interested in how people with disabilities constructed their struggle within the conceptual split between disadvantage caused by ‘malfunctioning’ bodies (a ‘medical model’ view) and that caused by social organisation (a ‘social model’ view). Methods Seven people between the ages of 39 and 47 who had acquired a physical disability within the last 4 years were recruited in a rural area of Limpopo province, South Africa. Semi-structured face-to-face interviews were conducted, and the resulting data were thematically analysed. The authors were positioned as both ‘insiders’ and ‘outsiders’ to the participants and sought to use this orientation to best understand and stay faithful to participants’ views while simultaneously applying participant’s experiences to conceptual knowledge in disability studies. Results Four themes emerged: (1) emotional impact of onset of disability, (2) being introduced to disablist prejudice, (3) being required to take on a ‘disabled’ identity and (4) socio-economic implications of becoming disabled. The findings reflected a complex set of adverse experiences in the lives of the participants, spanning disadvantages based on embodied, cultural, relational and environmental factors, which were superimposed on existing, generalised poverty in their local communities. Participants made sense of their predicament in multiple, evolving ways. Conclusion This study contributes to the understanding of the complex predicaments, and sense-making, of persons who have acquired a disability in a rural, impoverished Global South environment.

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