Document Type

Article

Abstract

Background

Resilience has been established as a protective factor against mental health challenges (e.g., anxiety, depression). From an intersectional perspective, the stressors experienced by Black women living in rural communities are likely to have been exacerbated during the COVID-19 pandemic. This study aims to identify the challenges and stressors experienced and the resilience resources available to and relied upon by rural, Black women, during the pandemic.

Methods

Individual, in-depth, structured interviews (n = 24) were conducted among Black women living in rural South Carolina, recruited by local community health workers, from January to April of 2024. All interviews were recorded, uploaded to a password-protected online drive, transcribed using Otter.ai, and verified for verbatim transcription. The data were analyzed using an abductive approach where the data were inductively coded following a thematic analysis approach and were then deductively situated within a socioecological model.

Results

Participants shared challenges and stressors (i.e., anxiety, depression, isolation, grief, visitation limitations, employment changes, increased cost of living, structural and systemic inequity, and limited access to mental healthcare) experienced throughout the pandemic. Resilience resources were also identified at the individual (i.e., religion and faith, self-care), interpersonal (i.e., generational knowledge of preparedness, social connection), organizational (i.e., workplace and religious institution pandemic policy adaptation), community (i.e., rural community norms, trusted community messengers, food and supply drives), and structural levels (i.e., emergency SNAP enrollment, stimulus checks) of the socioecological model.

Conclusions

The present results suggest that interventions, designed to prepare and respond to public health emergencies, should leverage and amplify existing community-led resilience resources, thereby adequately tailoring efforts and ensuring they meet the needs identified by community members.

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0342512

Rights

© 2026 N’Diaye et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.

APA Citation

N’Diaye, A., Garrett, C., Wilcox, S., Olatosi, B., Li, X., & Qiao, S. (2026). Challenges, stressors, and resilience resources experienced by older black women in Rural South Carolina throughout the COVID-19 pandemic. PLOS One, 21(2), e0342512.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0342512

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