Neuropsychiatric Disease and Treatment (Feb 2024)

What Do Farmers Need for Suicide Prevention: Considerations for a Hard-to-Reach Population

  • Scheyett A,
  • Marburger IL,
  • Scarrow A,
  • Hollifield SM,
  • Dunn JW

Journal volume & issue
Vol. Volume 20
pp. 341 – 352

Abstract

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Anna Scheyett,1,2 Ian Lee Marburger,2 Andrea Scarrow,1 Stephanie M Hollifield,1 Jennifer Ward Dunn1 1College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences, University of Georgia, Athens, GA, USA; 2School of Social Work, University of Georgia, Athens, GA, USACorrespondence: Anna Scheyett, School of Social Work, University of Georgia, 279 Williams St, Athens, GA, USA, Email [email protected]: Farmers have suicide rates much higher than the general population, with elevated mental health symptoms and high stress levels. Farmers are a hard-to-reach population due to occupational demands and a culture where conversations about mental health are often stigmatizing. This study explored ways to tailor suicide prevention strategies to unique characteristics of farmers by speaking with groups close to farmers who were open to discussing stress and suicide prevention: women married to farmers and agricultural Extension agents.Methods: Focus groups with women married to farmers (N=29) and interviews with agricultural agents from the university’s local Cooperative Extension offices (N=13) from rural Georgia counties explored effective ways outreach and education about suicide prevention, mental health, and coping could be provided to farmers. Using a thematic analysis approach, qualitative coding was completed by two researchers (Cohens kappa=0.86), with initial codes collapsed into common themes.Results: Four themes were identified: 1) Barriers due to the nature of farming, including time demands of farming and cultural stigma in help-seeking; 2) Acceptable messaging, including framing conversations as part of general health; 3) Make information accessible by making it brief, clear, and omnipresent through multiple media; and 4) Elements of effective information and education, including emphasizing “you’re not alone” and connection, how to access supports and crisis services, educating people close to farmers, and motivating farmers by emphasizing that they could help another farmer with the information.Conclusion: Due to farmers’ stoic identities and reluctance to admit mental health struggles, speaking with those close to farmers may help us better understand what is needed to tailor farmer suicide prevention strategies. The insights shared by participants suggest that culturally responsive outreach and education strategies, strengthening relationships through peer support, and gatekeeper training with specific trusted others are important ways to tailor suicide prevention strategies for this hard-to-reach group.Keywords: agricultural stress, agricultural suicide, rural suicide prevention, farmer culture, mental health stigma, rural mental health

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