The Woolwich Observer

Farmers’ mental health worsens

- OWEN ROBERTS

The picture of Canadian farmers’ beleaguere­d mental health just got clearer…and it’s not a pretty sight.

A study released Monday by University of Guelph researcher­s shows that compared to a survey conducted five years ago, farmers’ mental health is worse than the general population in almost every outcome investigat­ed.

They say traits they examined, including exhaustion and cynicism (two of the three components of burnout), stress, anxiety, depression, suicide ideation and lower resilience, speak of a grim reality.

One out of every four farmers surveyed said their life was not worth living, wish they were dead or thought of taking their own life in the last 12 months.

“It’s a very troubling situation,” says population medicine Prof. Andria Jones-Bitton, who conducted the study with Dr. Briana Hagen and Master of Science student Rochelle Thompson.“We need and want Canadian farmers to be stronger than ever, especially as we face huge worldwide food production questions. Unfortunat­ely, from a mental health perspectiv­e,

that doesn’t appear to be case.”

The research revealed that women farmers were experienci­ng more dire effects than men in every aspect of mental health that was examined. Jones-Bitton saw women with higher scores in the 2015-16 survey too, but she says the difference­s now seem more pronounced.

“I suspect for women farmers, it heavily relates to role conflict whereby women – in addition to working on-farm and potentiall­y off-farm – are responsibl­e for other roles like ‘default parent,’ household operations, and go-to person for support,” she says. “This, in addition to the pressures of farming and the pandemic, places a large burden on women.”

The only exception concerned alcohol use – also troubling, of course – where men had significan­tly higher scores than women.

The research, funded by Agricultur­e and Agri-Food Canada, involved nearly 1,200 participan­ts from all commodity groups across Canada, from February to May 2021. At that time, the pandemic had reared up again, and heading into spring, the mood in the farming community was suppressed.

The researcher­s say the COVID-19 pandemic exacerbate­d an already tenuous situation. During that time, mental health problems related to high stress, burnout, anxiety and depression accelerate­d across all of society, including the farm community.

Jones-Bitton’s pioneering research in this area establishe­d Canada as a world leader in understand­ing farmers’ mental health.

She has long advocated for a strong call to action for evidence-based, coordinate­d research and programmin­g to provide support for farmer mental health and well-being in Canada.

She says this study highlights opportunit­ies for stress management training to better support Canadian farmers’ resilience and growth. As well, she says, it also confirms the need to bring together and support profession­ally trained individual­s to develop and deliver mental health programmin­g for agricultur­e, and work with farming stakeholde­rs and researcher­s to formally evaluate the programmin­g to ensure safe and effective mental health treatment and prevention.

“The more we learn from research, the more we understand the problems and possible ways to address them,” she says.

Jones-Bitton says the research team plans to update the findings every five years.

And meanwhile, spring planting once again gets underway, for a highly challenged farming community.

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