A growing crisis is silently unfolding in agriculture. Farmers are 3.5 times more likely to die by suicide than the general population. With mounting financial stress, that number could be on the rise this year, writes farm reporter Tyne Morgan.
The number of farmers dying by suicide is on the rise, and it could be at a rate U.S. agriculture hasn’t seen since the 1980s.
Even though statistics on suicides among farmers aren’t reliable from the 1980s because many were deemed “accidents” during that time, some estimates point to more than 1,000 farmers dying by suicide during that crisis.
“Unfortunately, it just almost seems like it’s a pandemic situation. I mean, there’s a lot of it, and it’s sad,” says Brent Foreman, a farmer in Shelby County, Mo., who knows the impacts of farmer suicides all too well.
“From an agricultural perspective, there’s a lot of stress in this industry, especially now,” Foreman says. “And somebody that’s contemplating this. I would say, we as farmers, we like to try to fix things, and we’re pretty good at it, but you can’t fix everything. If you get to a point like that, please reach out to someone, a family member, a good friend. Just please try to get some help.”
When a person loses hope, that’s when the situation turns bleak.
“Sadly, that is the end all for a lot of people,” said Jolie Foreman, executive director at Shelby County Cares.
“Hope is key. If you have hope, you can keep going. When you lose hope, it’s just a very dangerous place to be.”
In Canada, a number of farm organizations, the Canadian Association for Mental Health and rural communities have stepped up efforts to persuade stressed farmers to seek professional help.
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