Carpenter-Song Elizabeth, Snell-Rood Claire
Dr. Carpenter-Song is with the Department of Anthropology, Dartmouth College, Hanover, New Hampshire (e-mail:
Psychiatr Serv. 2017 May 1;68(5):503-506. doi: 10.1176/appi.ps.201600024. Epub 2016 Nov 15.
Recent social changes and rising social inequality in the rural United States have affected the experience and meaning of mental illness and treatment seeking within rural communities. Rural Americans face serious mental health disparities, including higher rates of suicide and depression compared with residents of urban areas, and substance abuse rates in rural areas now equal those in urban areas. Despite these increased risks, people living in rural areas are less likely than their urban counterparts to seek or receive mental health services. This Open Forum calls for a research agenda supported by anthropological theory and methods to investigate the significance of this changed rural social context for mental health.
美国农村地区近期的社会变革和日益加剧的社会不平等,已经影响了农村社区中精神疾病的体验和寻求治疗的意义。与城市居民相比,美国农村居民面临严重的心理健康差距,包括更高的自杀率和抑郁症发病率,而且农村地区的药物滥用率现已与城市地区持平。尽管存在这些增加的风险,但农村地区的居民比城市居民寻求或获得心理健康服务的可能性更小。本次公开论坛呼吁制定一项由人类学理论和方法支持的研究议程,以调查这种变化的农村社会背景对心理健康的意义。