The Scotsman

FRIENDS OF THE SCOTSMAN

You don’t have to be a city worker to suffer from depression and stress, but help is at hand for farming sector, writes Jim Hume

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For too long mental health has been a taboo subject and in our rural communitie­s the lack of anonymity, in that “everyone knows everyone”, has made it even more difficult for people to seek help at an early stage.

The National Rural Mental Health Forum has grown in strength from 16 membership organisati­ons to more than 60 within the past 18 months, and is acting on evidence of a willingnes­s from our rural communitie­s to tackle the stigma surroundin­g mental health issues.

Now we are seeing mental health and wellbeing coming to the top of the agenda for organisati­ons that have long been interested in more traditiona­l industry priorities.

This was obvious at the recent National Farmers’ Union of Scotland’s (NFUS) autumn conference in Birnam, when mental health was given prominent billing alongside subjects such as land use, alternativ­e crops and satellite technology.

As convener of the National Rural Mental Health Forum, I was joined by mental health campaigner and author Graham Morgan, who has lived experience of mental ill-health and Mags Granger of the charity that supports people in the agricultur­al community, RSABI.

Graham explained: “It can be hard to get time to be with family and friends and to just relax and that the idea of a mental health day off because you cannot face the snow in the morning is just plain ludicrous. That getting access to someone to talk about the stress you are under would feel just plain impossible when you have a field to plough or animals to tend to and hardly any signal to your mobile. That there can be that tension of how to pass on a loved business, land and a home to your children and equally sometimes a tension from your children as to whether they want to take it on, that the weather can be bleak, the night cold, the mud clingy and your eyes red raw with tiredness.”

“It is a pretty obvious thing to say, but you have a right to get help when you struggle to cope and a right not to be so alone when life is difficult.

“Mental illness, depression, anxiety, that dark night we sometimes inhabit, we can and do feel ashamed of it but there is no need to, it is as natural a part of life as anything else and something most of us experience.

“To hide it away, to say that it is shameful; that is a strange reaction really. Such things are far better addressed in some fashion, what fashion that might be is of course very individual.”

NFUS president Andrew Mccornick said: “Speaking about mental health and wellbeing is something we have never really been known for in the farming sector, usually preferring to keep quiet and get on with things rather than seeking help when we are feeling low. This is not the healthy response and I am pleased to say I think the culture around mental health in farming is beginning to change.

“The best thing you can do for your family, your farm and yourself is to be open about the stresses and anxieties which we are all susceptibl­e to in our high pressure industry.

“The work of the National Rural Mental Health Forum has never been more important, which is whyi am so pleased to sit on it on behalf of NFU Scotland’s members.”

It is encouragin­g to see that rural communitie­s have now put mental health on top of their agenda and are using their networks, magazines and events to normalise talking about our mental health.

Evidence of that was the NFUS conference. We had organisati­ons from farming, forestry, fishing, crofting and conservati­on as members, all getting together to examine ways of tackling mental ill health and improving wellbeing in areas that are often far from traditiona­l services.

Much work is to be done, and the

forum is dedicated to working with its partners to improve mental health and wellbeing support in rural Scotland, make it an everyday discussion topic, ensure decision-makers realise and act on the fact that it does happen in rural areas too, and that we have a vibrant, growing network of organisati­ons acting together to address mental health in rural Scotland.

The forum was set up by the mental health charity Support in Mind Scotland, who support 1,300 individual­s from across Scotland every week, over 80 per cent of whom are in rural areas.

They have more than 45 years’ experience in looking after those experienci­ng mental ill health and run 17 services.

The forum has public, private and third sector organisati­ons involved, including government department­s, expert mental health organisati­ons and organisati­ons that represent many rural communitie­s, including farming, fishing, forestry, croftingan­dconservat­ion.allfocusin­gon improving mental health and wellbeing in rural Scotland.

The National Rural Mental Health Forum has been developed and run by the mental health charity, Support in Mind Scotland and is supported by the Scottish Government.

Forum membership can be found at: www.ruralwellb­eing.org/partners Jim Hume, convener of the National Rural Mental Health Forum, Support in Mind Scotland.

 ??  ?? 0 Jim Hume, convener of the National Rural Mental Health Forum, Graham Morgan, Mental Welfare Commission of Scotland, Mags Granger, RSABI and Martin Kennedy, NFUS vice-president.
0 Jim Hume, convener of the National Rural Mental Health Forum, Graham Morgan, Mental Welfare Commission of Scotland, Mags Granger, RSABI and Martin Kennedy, NFUS vice-president.
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