Understanding farmers’ barriers to health and mental health‐related help‐seeking: The development, factor structure, and reliability of the Farmer Help‐Seeking Scale

Author:

Skaczkowski Gemma1ORCID,Hull Melissa2ORCID,Smith Ashleigh E.2ORCID,Dollman James2ORCID,Jones Martin13ORCID,Gunn Kate M.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Rural Health, Allied Health & Human Performance University of South Australia Adelaide South Australia Australia

2. Alliance for Research in Exercise, Nutrition and Activity, Allied Health & Human Performance University of South Australia Adelaide South Australia Australia

3. School of Nursing and Midwifery La Trobe University Bundoora Melbourne Australia

Abstract

AbstractPurposeThe aim of this research was to develop a contextually and culturally appropriate scale to assess farmers’ barriers to health‐related help‐seeking.MethodsAn initial pool of items was developed from the academic literature and input from an expert panel of farmers, rural academics, and rural clinicians. A draft 32‐item questionnaire was then developed and sent to farmers registered with FARMbase, which is an Australian national farmer database.FindingsTwo hundred and seventy‐four farmers completed the draft questionnaire (93.7% male, 73.7% aged 56‐75 years). An exploratory factor analysis identified 6 factors; “Health Issues are a Low Priority,” “Concerns about Stigma,” “Structural Health System Barriers,” “Minimization and Normalization,” “Communication Barriers,” and “Continuity of Care.”. Test‐retest reliability was examined with a further 10 farmers (90% male, Mean age = 57, SD = 5.91), who completed the questionnaire twice (at 2‐ to 3‐week intervals). Results indicated moderate‐good test‐retest reliability.ConclusionsThe resulting 24‐item Farmer Help‐Seeking Scale provides a measure of help‐seeking that is specifically designed to capture the unique context, culture, and attitudes that can interfere with farmers’ help‐seeking, and inform the development of strategies to increase health‐service utilization in this at‐risk group.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

Reference78 articles.

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2. Suicide in Selected Occupations in Queensland: Evidence from the State Suicide Register

3. Suicide and accidental death in Australia's rural farming communities: a review of the literature;Kennedy AJ;Rural Remote Health,2014

4. Suicide by occupation: Systematic review and meta-analysis

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