In pain and lonely? A longitudinal study examining the associations between menstrual pain, physical functioning and loneliness
In pain and lonely? A longitudinal study examining the associations between menstrual pain, physical functioning and loneliness

In pain and lonely? A longitudinal study examining the associations between menstrual pain, physical functioning and loneliness

Br J Health Psychol. 2025 Sep;30(3):e12805. doi: 10.1111/bjhp.12805.

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND AND AIMS: The current study aimed to determine the prospective associations between menstrual pain, physical health functioning and loneliness.

METHOD: We collected three waves of data from a community cohort of women reporting at least mild menstrual pain over 3 years. Participants were women aged 18-50, living in Australia, who had experienced regular menses and menstrual pain in the past year. Two hundred and eighty-nine women (n = 100 with self-reported endometriosis, 34% of current sample) completed the online questionnaires at all three time points and had complete data assessing pain severity, physical functioning and loneliness.

RESULTS: Poorer physical functioning was associated with greater loneliness (β = -.371, p < .001). Contrary to our expectations, menstrual pain severity was not associated directly with loneliness but was indirectly associated via physical functioning (R2 = .195, p < 001).

DISCUSSION: The overall stability in physical functioning over time suggests that a person’s degree of physical functioning could be an early indicator of loneliness experiences. Health professionals wanting to mitigate loneliness amongst people with menstrual pain might benefit from screening for and addressing physical functioning impairment. It might also be beneficial to screen for and treat menstrual pain to ensure that it does not lead to or exacerbate physical functioning impairment.

CONCLUSION: Future research should consider the underlying mechanisms that drive the associations between physical functioning and loneliness.

PMID:40415565 | DOI:10.1111/bjhp.12805