-->
Oklahoma Farm Report masthead graphic with wheat on the left and cattle on the right.
      

Agricultural News


Farming is Stressful and getting worse, but programs from @FarmAid and @USDA_NIFA aim to Help!

Wed, 15 Dec 2021 08:05:24 CST

Farming is Stressful and getting worse, but programs from  @FarmAid and @USDA_NIFA aim to Help! Billboards in both English and Spanish that encourage mental health conversations are going up throughout Washington's farming communities as part of suicide prevention and farm stress management outreach by Washington State University's Skagit County Extension staff.

Don McMoran has felt the stress only farmers can.

The Washington State University Extension director in Skagit County grew up on a farm. Friends killed themselves. Family members pressured him to preserve the generational business.

But farmers don't talk about those things.

"I was taught from a very young age to keep a stiff upper lip and not to complain and to solve your own problems," McMoran said. Farmers face such a stigma that prevents them from seeking help.

To give farmers more places where they can talk about those things, McMoran and his staff steer several suicide prevention programs that include workshops, "kitchen table" economic counseling, billboards, Farm Aid hotline operators and partnerships with 13 Western states and four territories supported by more than $8 million in federal and state grants, as well as some private donations.

The effort is great, but so is the need.

A 2020 Centers for Disease Control study found farming was among the top 10 occupations for men who die by suicide, and it's been getting worse. Last year, USA Today reported that more than 450 farmers from nine Midwestern states killed themselves between 2014 and 2018, while calls to the Farm Aid hotline doubled in the same period. The story blamed a combination of falling prices, increasing debt, extreme weather and export disruptions.

The pandemic only piled on the stress. In 2020, the Farm Aid hotline and email service received 900 contacts, a 20 percent increase over the previous year. And while the Midwest has been hit hard, it's not alone. In the first half of 2020, the top six tree-fruit-producing states accounted for nearly one of every five calls.

"Farming is as stressful as it's been in a very long time, probably going back to the Dust Bowl days," McMoran said.

The Farm Aid hotline

If you or someone in the agricultural field needs emotional help, call the Farm Aid farmer hotline: 1-800-FARM-AID (1-800-327-6243) from 9 a.m. to 10 p.m. Eastern Time and 6 a.m. to 7 p.m. Pacific Time. The hotline is available for English and Spanish speakers.


   

 

WebReadyTM Powered by WireReady® NSI

 


Top Agricultural News

  • Oklahoma Youth Expo Sale of Champions Sale Order Available Here- Sale Set for 4 PM Friday  Fri, 17 Mar 2023 04:50:54 CDT
  • Rural Voters Dominated Vote to Defeat Recreational Marijuana March 7th  Fri, 10 Mar 2023 07:13:05 CST
  • Ron Hays Talks to Israeli Ag Tour Guide Colin Lotzof About the Miraclel of Ag in Israel  Wed, 22 Feb 2023 22:11:04 CST
  • OALP Members Experience First Hand View of Cutting Edge Drip Irrigation Technology as Israel Travel Ends  Wed, 22 Feb 2023 10:51:49 CST
  • OALP Members Get First Hand View of Cutting Edge Drip Irrigation Technology as Israel Travel Ends  Wed, 22 Feb 2023 10:50:10 CST
  • Oklahoma Ag Leadership Program Sees Fruit, Beef and Dairy Production North of the Sea of Galilee in Israel  Mon, 20 Feb 2023 21:56:02 CST
  • Oklahoma Ag Leadership Program Sees Diverse Farm Operations in Jordan River Valley of Israel  Sun, 19 Feb 2023 21:17:30 CST
  • Israeli Tour Guide Mark Kedem Talks About The Cultural Aspects of What Class XX of OALP is Experiencing   Sat, 18 Feb 2023 22:17:23 CST

  • More Headlines...

       
       
         
       
       

    Search OklahomaFarmReport.com

    © 2008-