Scheyett Anna, Marburger Ian Lee, Scarrow Andrea, Hollifield Stephanie M, Dunn Jennifer Ward
College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences, University of Georgia, Athens, GA, USA.
School of Social Work, University of Georgia, Athens, GA, USA.
Neuropsychiatr Dis Treat. 2024 Feb 22;20:341-352. doi: 10.2147/NDT.S452561. eCollection 2024.
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.
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.
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.
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.
农民的自杀率远高于普通人群,心理健康症状较为严重,压力水平也很高。由于职业需求以及心理健康话题常带有污名化色彩的文化氛围,农民群体很难接触到相关信息。本研究通过与亲近农民且愿意讨论压力和自杀预防的群体进行交流,探索如何根据农民的独特特征调整自杀预防策略,这些群体包括农民的妻子和农业推广人员。
对佐治亚州农村县的农民妻子进行焦点小组访谈(N = 29),并对大学当地合作推广办公室的农业推广人员进行访谈(N = 13),探讨向农民提供自杀预防、心理健康和应对方面的有效外展服务和教育的方法。采用主题分析方法,由两名研究人员完成定性编码(科恩卡方系数 = 0.86),初始编码合并为共同主题。
确定了四个主题:1)农业性质导致的障碍,包括农业的时间需求和寻求帮助时的文化污名;2)可接受的信息传递方式,包括将对话构建为一般健康的一部分;3)通过多种媒体使信息简短、清晰且无处不在,从而便于获取;4)有效信息和教育的要素,包括强调“你并不孤单”和建立联系、如何获得支持和危机服务、教育亲近农民的人以及通过强调他们可以将信息帮助其他农民来激励农民。
由于农民坚忍的形象以及不愿承认心理健康问题,与亲近农民的人交流可能有助于我们更好地理解调整农民自杀预防策略所需的内容。参与者分享的见解表明,具有文化适应性的外展和教育策略、通过同伴支持加强关系以及对特定可信赖他人进行守门人培训,是为这个难以接触的群体调整自杀预防策略的重要方式。