key: cord-0025599-h1mj75e9 authors: Younker, Terasa; Radunovich, Heidi Liss title: Farmer Mental Health Interventions: A Systematic Review date: 2021-12-26 journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health DOI: 10.3390/ijerph19010244 sha: 991933fd9455e007850320748c5c47a694d5e43e doc_id: 25599 cord_uid: h1mj75e9 The prevalence of mental health disorders and suicide amongst agricultural producers is a global problem. Community leaders, researchers, policymakers, and clinicians have mobilized to develop programs to address this issue. This study reviewed a wide range of mental health interventions targeting farmer mental health spanning over 50 years and examined their reported effectiveness and constraints. A total of ninety-two articles on farmer mental health were included in a final systematic review. Most articles were written concerning mental health literacy and peer and paraprofessional support interventions in the United States and Australia. Among the 56 studies reporting empirical evaluative data, 21 were mixed-method, 20 quantitative, 11 qualitative, and 5 literature synthesis. Non-experimental, self-reported, and qualitative data suggest efficacy of mental health literacy programs, peer and paraprofessional support, and community-based and agroecological interventions. However, most interventions were not subject to rigorous evaluation and only one intervention was evaluated using a control condition. The heterogeneity of existing studies and paucity of rigorous evaluation proscribes firm conclusions related to program-type efficacy. This review demonstrates that there is still a need for a stronger and broader evidence base in the field of farmer mental health interventions, which should focus on both holistic, multi-component programs and targeted approaches. Since the 1980s, a wealth of literature has documented mental health issues among different populations of agricultural producers across the geographical, political, cultural, and socioeconomic spectrum [1] . Even during the best of times, agricultural work-defined here as cultivation, domestication, horticulture, arboriculture, and vegeculture, as well as forms of livestock management including aquaculture-exposes producers to uncontrollable and unpredictable conditions such as fickle weather patterns, unpredictable animals and machinery, role conflict, time pressure, long hours of physically demanding and repetitive labor, and social isolation [2] . Acute and chronic stressors which overwhelm an individual's coping capacity can lead to heightened levels of psychological distress, mental health issues, and suicide [3] . However, the psychosocial stress experienced by primary producers has been tremendously exacerbated by rapid, radical changes in global food systems [4] . What was once a relatively self-sufficient family-farm-based model of agriculture has been transformed into a technology and market-oriented global "industry", which extends from agricultural production, to sophisticated agriscience, and agribusiness. These changes have forced many farmers out of the profession and forced those who remain to grapple with greater levels of uncertainty regarding what will happen to their livelihoods [5] . Although existing research is insufficient to provide anything near a comprehensive portrait, studies from around the world have documented significantly higher rates of depression, anxiety, and suicide among farmers than the general population [6] [7] [8] [9] [10] [11] [12] [13] [14] [15] [16] . In the United States, male agricultural managers die by suicide at nearly twice the rate of men depression, anxiety, and suicide among farmers than the general population [6] [7] [8] [9] [10] [11] [12] [13] [14] [15] [16] . In the United States, male agricultural managers die by suicide at nearly twice the rate of men in the general population [17] , and recent studies in the Midwest have found that ⅔ of producers reported anxiety disorders, and over half reported depression [16] . In the UK, 88% of farmers under the age of 40 rank poor mental health as their greatest challenge today [18] . It should be noted that high rates of mental health issues have also been documented globally among farmworker populations in high-income countries [19] . However, as the sets of issues affecting farmworkers, who are often migratory, undocumented, low-paid, and perform the most difficult and dangerous agricultural labor, are distinct from those of primary producer farmers, they are excluded from this review. Farmers have also been more likely to report other symptoms of psychological distress including burnout [20] , hopelessness [21] , and loss of self-esteem [22] . Risk factors for mental health issues and suicide among farmers have been identified as financial distress [11, 16, 23, 24] , pesticide exposure [25] [26] [27] [28] , social isolation [23, 29, 30] , health issues and chronic pain [2, [31] [32] [33] [34] [35] , poor access to healthcare [23, 29, 32, 36, 37] , access to lethal means [34, [38] [39] [40] , weather uncertainty [41, 42] , regulation compliance and paperwork [20, 29, 43] , and a sense of marginalization and beleaguerment [44] [45] [46] . Recent evidence suggests that the mental health and suicide crises faced by farming communities are growing increasingly dire as globalization, trade liberalization and financial deregulation, resource scarcity, rural depopulation, and climate change accelerate [23, [47] [48] [49] [50] [51] . Work-related stress and distress are also highly associated with suicide among agricultural producers: the supply-chain disruptions caused by the COVID-19 pandemic brought this into sharp relief with stories of desperate agricultural producers dying by suicide as their unsold produce was dumped into ditches and plowed into the ground [52] . Although the drivers of mental wellness are well established [11] [12] [13] [14] [15] 29, 36, 37, 40] (see Figure 1 ), providing relief to farmers is fraught with challenges. The cost of mental healthcare is prohibitive for many farming families, and even when money is not an issue, access is limited by a severe global shortage of mental health providers [53] . This shortage is exacerbated by maldistribution and unequal access to mental healthcare, which disproportionately affects low-income countries and rural areas, home to the majority of the world's farmers [53, 54] . Widespread stigma toward mental illness and deeply held cultural values of stoicism, hard work, and self-reliance further limit access to traditional forms of mental healthcare [55] [56] [57] . Part of the tragedy of these crises is that the persistent agricultural mental health issues manifested by this population are highly preventable or treatable [37, 58] . Since at least the 1970s, communities across the globe have responded to the increases in farmer mental health and suicide crises by developing and implementing a wide variety of programs, policies, and other interventions [59] [60] [61] . The available evidence suggests that some of these interventions have been effective, while others have made little impact. In this article, we review approximately 90 interventions, characterized broadly into four categories, developed to improve mental health outcomes or reduce suicide rates among agricultural producers and in agricultural communities. We also examined their reported effectiveness and constraints (if any) to serve as a reference for researchers, policymakers, and clinicians as they mobilize to develop programs for their own communities. To date there has been no systematic literature review of mental health interventionsdefined here as programs and policies aiming to reduce psychological distress, promote overall mental wellness, improve specific mental health outcomes and reduce suicide-targeting agricultural producers. In 2019, Hagen and colleagues published a scoping review of mental health outcomes and interventions among farming populations worldwide, but this review did not include studies published before 1998, and did not specifically examine intervention outcomes [62] . It also included programs targeting farmworkers whose issues and needs may vary from producers. Furthermore, in 2019, Inwood and colleagues published the results of an online scan of resources to present a baseline typology of current mental health programs and response efforts to farmer distress in the 12-state Extension North Central Region. However, these results are limited and do not include evaluative data [63] . This systematic literature review, with no protocol registration, was based on the JBI recommendations [64] and reported according to the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA; [65] ) protocol. It is intended to answer the question, "What interventions intended to improve the mental health of farmers have been reported in the academic literature, and what is the evidence on their effectiveness and limitations?" The Population-Intervention-Comparison-Outcome-Study Design (PICOS) approach, a modification of the PICO framework, was applied to systematically define the eligibility criteria (Appendix A). The PICOS strategy was guided by the World Health Organization definitions of mental health, mental illness, mental health promotion and protection, and mental health care and treatment [66] . The primary author conducted a comprehensive search of peer-reviewed academic articles from May to August 2021 in five electronic databases: PsycINFO, PubMed, Scopus, Agricola, and Google Scholar. The following keywords were utilized in the search: mental health, behavioral health, depression, anxiety, stress, distress, stressors, crisis, suicide, suicidal, psychological, wellbeing, well-being, burnout, and resilience, in combination with farmer, farming, agricultural, and producer, in combination with intervention, evaluation, social support, emotional support, psychological support, program, promotion, prevention, and help. We initially conducted the search in the academic databases PsycNET, PubMed, Agricola, and Web of Science. However, these searches resulted in only 21 articles eligible for inclusion, all published after 2000. Our work in Extension has made us aware of interventions conducted during the 1980s Farm Crisis, and we determined that it was important to capture this literature as well. We expanded our search to the crawler-based Google Scholar to capture this literature. Because Google Scholar includes grey and other non-academic literature and purports to display results in order of relevance, we only screened the first 1000 results (out of 2,500,000). The full electronic database search generated 4133 English language articles (excluding duplicates). The title screening yielded 1354 articles, which were then screened by abstract using the following criteria: 1. Does the study address issues of mental health or known risk factors of mental health? If an article appeared to meet both the above criteria in the abstract screening ("yes" to questions 1. and 2.), the full text was retrieved for review with the full criteria (see Appendix A for details). If the article did not appear to meet the above criteria, it was excluded from further review. A total of one hundred and thirteen full text articles were assessed according to the full criteria, and 1241 articles were excluded at the abstract stage. Citation and reference searches yielded an additional 125 articles, which were reviewed in full. A total of ninety-two articles met full inclusion criteria after full-text review (see Appendix B for a detailed table of included articles). A total of one hundred and forty-six articles were excluded at the full text screening stage. Given that our goal was to summarize interventions within this field so that practitioners and researchers can better understand what has been tried, and that a large proportion of studies published on this topic did not report evaluative data, we chose not to use study quality as a criterion for inclusion. Figure 2 provides the roadmap followed for the studies selection. The secondary author oversaw all aspects of the selection procedures. There was full consensus between the authors regarding study inclusion and exclusion. Among the articles excluded during the abstract screening process, 437 were analyses of risk factors to farmer mental health, 349 were unrelated to farmer mental health, 246 addressed farmer mental health but did not include information on interventions, 117 addressed mental health interventions that did not primarily target farming populations, Number The earliest article identified in the search was published in 1980, the most recent in August 2021. Most studies addressed a single intervention and reported some evaluative data (n = 48), followed by studies addressing single interventions with descriptions only (n = 21), studies examining multiple interventions with descriptions only (n = 13), studies addressing multiple interventions reporting evaluative data (n = 6), and recommendations for intervention programming (n = 4). Most articles were written concerning interventions in the United States (n = 36), followed by Australia (n = 25), India (n = 10), Canada (n = 5), the UK (n = 4), New Zealand (n = 3), Sweden (n = 2), Tanzania (n = 2), Finland (n = 1), Indonesia (n = 1), and Ireland (n = 1). Among the 56 articles reporting empirical evaluative data, 21 reported data collected using mixed-methods, 20 using quantitative methods, 11 qualitative methods, and 5 were literature syntheses. The vast majority of reported evaluative data were purely descriptive (e.g., the number of program participants; n = 34). Of studies attempting to measure efficacy, non-experimental before-and-after design was the most common method (n = 15), followed by retrospective self-report (n = 6), and quasiexperimental design (n = 4). Only two articles reported purely experimental (clusterrandomized) evaluation schemes. Interventions with mental health literacy components were the most frequently addressed (n = 46), followed by peer and paraprofessional support (n = 26), and direct clinical intervention (n = 19). Other prominent intervention components included financial or material aid, or both (n = 11), service network development (n = 10), physical health promotion (n = 7), and agroecological education (n = 6) ( Figure 3 ). Mental health and crisis literacy programs were the most common and most evaluated components of mental health literacy interventions (n = 46). A total of fourteen articles addressed solely mental health or crisis literacy interventions, or both. A total of A total of four articles addressed interventions which promoted both mental and physical health literacy; two targeted farming families and one targeted individual farmers [97] [98] [99] [100] . Only one reported empirical evaluative data using a pre-and post-intervention mixed-methods design [97] . A total of two of these articles addressed Sustainable Farm Families of Australia, a 3-year long health-promotion program providing adult farming family members health assessments, provider referral, and health and wellness education workshops that included stress-management. In post-program quantitative surveys, participants' knowledge related to health and welfare increased significantly and was retained over a 3-year period [97] . In addition, 24% of participants reported the program had motivated them to improve their well-being by increasing leisure and family time. Comments from focus groups held as part of the intervention also indicated that participants found the stress-management information helpful. Depression index and alcohol use behaviors were also collected pre-intervention, but any change post-intervention was unreported [98] . Although unevaluated, the Rural Adversity Mental Health Program (RAMHP) provided MHFA to over 3000 members of farming communities along with partnering with established services to promote mental and physical health [99] . Similarly, Farmstrong, a New Zealand-wide rural wellbeing initiative providing farmers practical, proactive measures on wellbeing, was described but not evaluated [100] . As mentioned in the introduction, the shortage of mental health care providers in rural areas means that it is often non-mental health specialists such as general practitioners who eventually serve farmers with mental health conditions [54] . The lack of health providers who understand farming life and are well-versed in issues affecting the farming community is another major barrier to help-seeking [57] . Mental health literacy and crisis training for healthcare providers aims to address these issues. A total of six articles addressed mental health literacy initiatives for healthcare providers, two of which reported evaluative data. The Sustainable Farm Families Train the Trainer intervention in Victoria, Australia, trained healthcare providers on the Sustainable Farm Families program using a 5-day farming culture and crisis literacy workshop [101] . Focus groups held during the program A total of twelve studies addressed the important counseling role of local professionals not trained in mental health. A total of eight reported evaluative data, including four studies which provided evidence of the role of Rural Financial Counsellors (RFCs) in Australia as important first responders for farmers in crisis as well as trusted sources of support [116] [117] [118] [119] . In qualitative interviews of farmers by Alston [116] , RFCs were described as "a culturally appropriate source of support and advice and lacking stigma" despite the fact that they were not trained to provide emotional counseling. In a quantitative survey of RFCs [117] , Fuller and Broadbent found that nearly half (49%) of RFCs nationwide were referring a significant proportion of their clientele to social, emotional, and stress-related services. Fuller et al.'s network analysis of mental health related links between agricultural support, health, and other human services in rural New South Wales [118] ; RFC was found to be the most highly linked service. Yet nearly half of RFCs (49%) reported that referrals were difficult because of clients' unwillingness to acknowledge mental health problems or seek services, as well as the dearth of such services in rural areas [117] . Perceval and colleagues [106] describe how professional community members support farmers as "accidental counsellors." Focus groups with dairy farmers in New Zealand reported similar findings with regards to rural veterinarians [120] . Unfortunately, interviews with rural medical professionals revealed that many of these non-professional counsellors suffer vicarious trauma from performing the emotional labor of counselling distressed farmers [121] . None of the articles addressing "accidental" counseling in the United States reported evaluative data. Cooperative Extension Agents were described as frequently providing instrumental as well as emotional counseling to distressed farmers [86, 91, 122] . A total of three articles described counseling interventions which focused exclusively on financial, vocational, or business advice, or a combination thereof [85, 89, 108] . Two articles described counseling interventions but did not indicate whether the counseling was provided by a clinically trained healthcare provider or a paraprofessional [60, 93] . The Rural Families Empowerment Program in the US was described as "one-on-one outreach education to farm and rural families facing severe stress," combining proactive outreach, mental health education, along with case management to aid Iowa farm families in crisis [123] . Outreach counselors were "certified Family Development Specialists trained in group facilitation, dispute resolution, community development, diagnosis of mental health disorders, and crisis management." In post-intervention surveys, participants reported improvement on 17 indicators of family well-being and indicated that the program was most helpful in solving debt and substance use problems, and managing financial problems. In Australia, paraprofessional drought support workers were deployed to drought-devastated communities, but their effectiveness was limited by their extremely short contract periods [116] . Australian farmers and fishermen reported that community volunteerism itself had a salutatory effect on mental health in addition to strengthening community social capital [105] . A total of five articles discussed paraprofessional "case-finder" program components, but none reported evaluative data; three addressed interventions in the US [37, 87, 93] , and two addressed interventions in India [124, 125] . Overall, there are limited evaluation data available related to peer and paraprofessional support related to farmer mental health. However, multiple methods of support have been provided. What little data are available suggest that these programs are well-received, and that social support is likely a valuable contribution to any attempts to provide mental health support to farmers. A total of nineteen articles described interventions by clinical professionals, nine in the US, four in Australia, three in India, two in Canada, and two in the UK. Only two provided evaluative data. A total of seventeen articles describe crisis counseling interventions by professional mental health clinicians [37, 55, 57, [81] [82] [83] [84] 87, 93, 95, 104, 110, 111, 116, [126] [127] [128] . Unfortunately, the evaluation data on these initiatives are limited and purely descriptive. The Farm Partners (FP) Program administered by the New York Center for Agricultural Medicine and Health in the US is described as a proactive social case work program whereby social workers made unscheduled visits to farmers referred to them by concerned family or community members and provide a wide range of counseling and referral services [87] . From 1992 to 1998, the program served 395 farmers and made over 700 referrals. Survey responses on client satisfaction rated the service 3.3 on a 4-point scale. In Australia, RAMHP hired professional community mental health workers and responded to over 270 calls to its crisis hotline from 2007 to 2008 [99] . The Australian New South Wales Rural Mental Health Support Line, staffed by "mental health professionals," reported an average of 48 callers per month, with even numbers of male and female callers who were primarily farming family members, support providers, and non-farmer community members [126] . Hotline staff reported that they believed the service to be helpful to farmers. A total of two studies described but did not evaluate the deployment of mental health professionals offering broad-based psychosocial services to farmers in Australia [116] and Canada [57] . The author of the article describing the Canadian intervention cited a French language report suggesting "positive results notably on destigmatizing help-seeking and providing a proactive outreach to those people less likely to engage with professional services" [57] . None of the other articles addressing clinical counseling interventions in the US [37, 55, [81] [82] [83] [84] 93, 95, 104, 110, 111, 127] or India [128] reported any evaluative data. A total of two articles described but did not report evaluative data on nurse-led health services developed for farmers in the UK [129, 130] . A total of two articles addressed the introduction of additional psychiatrists to address farmer suicide in India [124, 131] . Badami [131] contends that the poorly administered, purely psychiatric mental health policies and clinical services of the District Mental Health Programme (DMHP) in Kerala, India, was ill-equipped to deal with the complex reality of agrarian suicide. It should also be noted that 23 articles addressed interventions which linked farm residents to community-based services including mental health professionals. However, only one article reported evaluative data; Rosmann [93] reported that SSoH linked more than 400 farm residents to healthcare providers since 1999. There appears to be a presumption that direct clinical services are beneficial for participants, with limited evaluation available. However, it is notable that concerns have arisen related to some of the clinical services described in these articles. Deploying therapists for short contract periods appears to be problematic for continuity of care. Further, some of the psychiatric services provided in India indicated that there may need to be better preparation for providers and a more comprehensive approach to issues of farmer mental health. A total of ten articles addressed interventions which provided direct financial or material aid, or both, to farmers, their farming families, or a combination of both. A total of five were located in the US, four in India, and one in Australia. Of the six articles which included evaluative components, evaluation was based on literature synthesis (n = 4), semi-structured interviews (n = 1), self-report (n = 1), and ethnography (n = 1). In the US, farming families who had received financial aid in Wisconsin overwhelmingly reported that the non-profit which provided the aid was the most helpful resource in alleviating their troubles [114] . A total of four other material aid programs [81, 91, 93, 108] were briefly described. A total of three studies utilized literature synthesis [131] [132] [133] and one literature synthesis and ethnography [134] to evaluate debt-relief schemes in India. A government payment scheme in Kerala, India, to compensate the families of farmers who died by suicide due to "agrarian distress," was critically evaluated and found to be ineffective and potentially harmful [131, 132, 134] . This scheme was a target of fraud and a bureaucratic nightmare to access. In addition, its funding was unsustainable, and it was criticized by mental health professionals as "encouraging people in debt to commit suicide" [131] . The second, a moratorium on farm loans, is described in slightly more positive tones [131] [132] [133] , but all four authors suggest that these interventions are a facile, less costly appeasement to political pressure rather than an implementation of necessary but difficult structural solutions. In Australia, the immense bureaucratic difficulties and frustration in accessing Exceptional Circumstance (EC) payments was described based on interviews with farmers and farm community members in New South Wales, Australia [116] . A total of nine articles described interventions aiming to increase communication and collaboration among stakeholders providing services to farmers in distress such as farm advocacy organizations, healthcare providers, and rural advisors [68, 83, 91, 93, 99, 111, [135] [136] [137] . Only one of these articles reported evaluative data. Quantitative evaluation of Farm-Link, which delivered MHFA workshops and facilitated meetings between "workers from the health and welfare sector and agricultural support and service sectors," indicated increased links between mental health-related services and other services in the target communities after the initiative [135] . Qualitative data were also taken in the form of interviews with three project staff who attributed much of the program's success to its ability to engage the agricultural and health sectors together. A total of six articles addressed agroecological education initiatives with the aim of restoring both farmer mental health and local ecology by teaching farmers chemical inputfree, environmentally sustainable polyculture. Non-Pesticide Management (NPM) was developed in India as an alternative to chemical-dependent farming in order to reduce financial distress and suicide caused by dependence on harmful chemical inputs [138] . Compared to the number of suicides in similar villages which had not adopted NPM, suicides in the pesticide-free communities decreased post-intervention. However, this difference was not significant due to the small sample size. The ideologically similar Zero-Budget Natural Farming (ZBNF) was promoted explicitly as a way to reduce indebtedness and suicide among Indian farmers [139] . Efficacy of ZBNF among farmers throughout Karnataka, was evaluated in a before-after study design using oral histories, semi-structured interviews, agricultural field visits, focus groups, participant-observation, and questionnaires. Farmers who converted to ZBNF from chemically-dependent farming reported significantly reduced stress, a more hopeful outlook, a stronger sense of purpose, and overall improved mental health. A total of two articles addressed the Singida Nutrition and Agroecology Project, which taught agroecology methods designed to increase food diversity and food security among smallholder families in Tanzania through increasing biodiversity and increasing the cultivation of legumes [140, 141] . A cluster-randomized efficacy trial demonstrated that levels of probable depression, as measured by the Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale (CES-D), decreased by 43% among women farmers in the intervention group [140] . Structural equation modelling revealed that the increase in house food security explained 23% of this impact [141] . Kāko'o 'Ōiwi [142] was described as a non-profit initiative to restore human and cultural relationships to revitalized lo'i kalo (traditional wetland and flooded field system agriculture) in Hawaii, US. Kāko'o 'Ōiwi' first goal was "to build capacity of farmers and provide local families with the opportunity to learn to farm and care for lo'i kalo and (re)connect to the land" [142] . Efficacy of the program was measured qualitatively using participatory methods based on an indigenous cultural ecosystem service process and framework. The farming families participating in the program reported significantly increased "Ola Mau," a Hawaiian term denoting mental and physical wellbeing, as a result of program participation. Improved mental wellbeing was described in terms of mental healing, self-acceptance, supportive social networks, and a sense of cultural and spiritual fulfillment. Authors of a qualitive meta-analysis of literature on natural resource management (NRM) programs in Australia proposed that agroecological programs have the potential to be deployed as non-traditional mental health interventions [143] . However, this hypothesis has yet to be empirically tested. A total of five articles suggested that participation in pro-farmer political action groups advocating humane farm policy may reduce stress and alleviate mental health problems in this population [57, 89, 92, 122, 134] . In his ethnographic analysis on farmer suicide in Kerala, India, Münster [134] noted that compared with the general farmer population, farmers participating in social movements rarely committed suicide. A total of four articles described but did not evaluate the role of organizations advocating for increased attention to agricultural mental health; two addressed interventions in Canada [57, 84] , one an intervention in Australia [105] , and one an intervention in the US [93] . A total of three articles addressed physical health promotion programs: one in Australia, one in Ireland, and one in the US. All three reported evaluative data, one using pre-and post-intervention design, one used a quasi-experimental design, and one was descriptive. All three targeted individual farmers. The earliest intervention, two farm health fairs held in the midwestern United States, invited local farmers to a free health screening and education event. It then mailed them individualized health recommendations after the event based on their health histories and health screening results taken at the fair [144] . A total of nine percent of respondents in a follow-up telephone survey reported strengthening stress reduction support systems because of the fair. Farming Fit in Australia [145] and a farmers fitness program in Ireland [146] took more proactive approaches. In Farming Fit, overweight and obese farmers were assigned individualized exercise programs over a 6-month period. An exercise physiologist and research assistant would monitor participant progress and be available for support. Researchers measured no difference between the intervention and control group for overall mental health at follow up, or a difference in cortisol levels. Rather than an individualized plan, a farmers fitness program in Ireland [146] held 2-h group exercise training sessions and 1-h lifestyle education trainings for obese and overweight farmers once a week over a period of 6 weeks. Mental health scores of participants significantly improved post-intervention. A total of three articles described research interventions. Rosmann [37] argued that the establishment of agromedicine research and training programs with behavioral health components such as the National Farm Medicine Center and journals such as the Journal of Agricultural Safety and Health, university-based programs, and non-university-based agricultural safety and health programs and organizations such as the AgriSafe Network are important players in addressing issues in the farming population despite the chronic underfunding of behavioral health components. Human and Wasem [104] also asserted that increased research funding on farmer mental health led to effective interventions. Roy [57] described the therapeutic effect of his qualitative research process itself on interviewee farmers. A total of two studies utilized community-based participatory research to design interventions, including farmers and community members as full and equal partners in designing and evaluating interventions. Both studies reported evaluative data. A suicide prevention education and training program in India utilized a community-based participatory research design to involve farmers, community leaders, organizational representatives, farmers educators, students, healthcare providers, and pesticide shop owners in developing educational material and training community stakeholders [147] . The educational materials were designed to educate various populations within the community on mental and behavioral health literacy, deliberate self-harm (DSH) and suicide prevention, violence against women, and safe pesticide use. Evaluation was based on feedback from target groups and pre-and post-intervention number of admissions to the local public health center for DSH and suicide. Feedback from target groups rated the educational materials as highly useful, and admissions to the local public health center for DSH and suicide declined post-intervention. Researchers in Indonesia recruited farmers into focus groups in order to promote recognition of health issues of farmers, analyze those issues, and develop solutions in coordination with public health centers [148] . The schema developed included communitylevel health education, social support groups, and health support workers. Qualitative feedback from focus groups indicated farmers were taking steps to better manage stress and improve their overall health. A total of two articles evaluated the impact of an occupational safety training program in Sweden [149, 150] . Pre-, post-, and follow-up questionnaires of participants in an intervention group and control group showed that work stress decreased immediately post-intervention and effects remained at follow-up. However, the control group also showed a decline in work stress, indicating that stress reduction may have had other causes than the intervention [149] . A total of one article evaluated a technological innovation which reduced occupational stress in Finnish farmers. In an evaluation of farmers who had adopted automatic milking systems (AMS) for dairy cows, 47.8% reported that adopting AMS reduced their mental stress, 19.7% reported no difference in stress after adopting AMS, and 31.6% stated that their mental stress had increased [151] . A total of six articles briefly mentioned skill training programs designed to improve financial well-being and family functioning, but did not report evaluative data [60, 83, 85, [90] [91] [92] . A total of one article briefly described the development of cooperatives as part of a mental health intervention during the American Farm Crisis [55] . No evaluative data were reported on this intervention. Although not describing specific interventions, four articles provided evidence-based recommendations for future mental health interventions in farming populations; three addressed farming populations in the US [61, 94, 152] and one addressed farmers in Australia [153] . Around the globe, community leaders and farmers themselves have galvanized resources to address stress, mental health issues, and suicide among farmers. Although evidence suggests that many of these programs proved helpful, unfortunately, rigorous evaluation of most of these interventions was severely lacking. Most English-language published articles provided only descriptive evidence, and those that did provide evaluative data overwhelmingly relied on self-report using non-standardized measures. Much of the literature addressed multiple interventions or multi-component interventions, proscribing evaluation of specific mechanisms. Only one intervention was of the gold-standard experimental design, and its narrow target of food-insecure female farmers with young children in Tanzania limits generalizability to other farming populations [140, 141] . The most consistent methodology used was self-report questionnaires concerning mental health literacy programs. Data from these questionnaires suggested that these programs significantly improve knowledge, attitudes, and helping behaviors among workers in farmer-facing professions [68, 70, 75, 97] . However, this evaluation was based entirely on self-report and does not reflect the experience of the farmers who are ostensibly the recipients of help. Only two mental health literacy intervention evaluations attempted to measure mental health improvements among actual farmers [74, 79] and none reported long-term impact. In addition, in 6-month follow-up evaluations, a substantial portion of trainees report that their limited contact time with farmers and farmers' unwillingness to talk about mental health issues impede their ability to actually utilize the skills [71] . Several researchers on farmer suicide in Australia have noted that although mental health literacy campaigns in general are effective in raising awareness of mental health issues, there is little evidence yet that they have led to changes in farmers' behaviors or increased their willingness to seek help, and they have not resulted in fewer suicides [106, 154, 155] . Stigma directed at help-seeking and mental health issues remains endemic despite these efforts [106] . Peer and paraprofessional support interventions were similarly understudied. Although qualitative accounts and retrospective surveys reported farmers benefiting from the emotional support they received from peers and paraprofessionals, there is evidence that taking on the role of "accidental counselor" can in turn harm the mental health of those helping [121] . Outside of client satisfaction surveys, evidence for direct clinical interventions was nonexistent. Qualitative studies suggested significant promise in agroecological interventions and community-based participatory research, but more robust evaluation in a variety of farming contexts utilizing consistent methodology is needed. Evidence for efficacy of other interventions was weak, mixed, or both. The dearth of evaluation of holistic, multi-component programs is the most unfortunate, however, as a large body of evidence in mental health interventions suggests that multilevel initiatives increase the odds of effectively countering stress, treating mental illness, and preventing suicide [92, [156] [157] [158] . Multi-component interventions included in this review such as Sowing Seeds of Hope (SSoH) [93] and the Rural Adversity Mental Health Program (RAMHP) [99] , although lacking robust evaluation, attracted high numbers of service users. The evidence is clear that farmers in distress often require a variety of resources: emotional counseling, an understanding of mental illness, technical advice, financial consultation, legal advice, social support, emergency needs, and vocational counseling, etc. Indeed, the overall lack of integrated human service delivery was the most criticized aspect of mental health interventions by both researchers and the farmers they interviewed [92, 104, 116, 131] . The difficulties in determining efficacy of concurrent components appears to have led to an emphasis on single interventions whose impacts are empirically and unambiguously measurable, despite the fact that holistic approaches are theoretically the most effective. This review has several limitations. First, our search terms may not have captured all interventions published in peer-reviewed journals. Given a broader search, we might have included papers that utilized differing terminology in their interventions. Second, we have only included results published in English, which, while providing an international perceptive, restricted the focus to mainly high-income, Anglophone countries. The dearth of research from low-income countries may be due to publishing language barriers, limited resources for research, or both, rather than a dearth of interventions. Third, this review only examined interventions described in published literature. There are likely interventions devised and used that remain unpublished. Fourth, only two authors were involved in the study selection; as there was full consensus between the authors on study inclusion, no third evaluator was consulted. Finally, as the international systematic review database (PROSPERO) was not accepting registrations for literature reviews at the time the study protocol was completed, there was no formal registration of the study protocol. There is an urgent need for a stronger and broader evidence base in the field of mental health interventions among farmers. Perhaps most imperative is the development of more effective evaluation methodologies for multi-component interventions, which theoretically suggest the most promise but are the least evaluated. For more focused interventions such as mental health literacy, there is a need for efficacy measures to focus more directly on indicators of farmer well-being as well as long-term effects. As qualitative research suggests that interventions which include farmers' views are acceptable and effective, more research needs to engage farmers in developing interventions which addresses specific social, environmental, and cultural factors affecting mental health. Our review has demonstrated that despite the high number and wide variety of farmer mental health interventions implemented globally in the past 50 years, very few received robust evaluation. This is especially true of the multitude of programs implemented during and after the American Farm Crisis. Evaluation of mental health literacy programs shows the most consistency but lacks construct validity. Evaluation of agroecological and community-based participatory research interventions appear to have high levels of validity but lack reliability. Although many of the programs reported high levels of usage by farmers, the unfortunate dearth of evaluation and inconsistency across interventions proscribes empirically-based conclusions about differing degrees of effectiveness. The authors acknowledge the help of the four anonymous reviewers whose comments improved this manuscript. The authors declare no conflict of interest. Table A1 . Population-Intervention-Comparison-Outcome-Study Design (PICOS). Primary agricultural producers, their families, members of farming/agricultural communities, or community stakeholders. The study sample or a substantial number of subjects (minimal 50%) are represented in the study population. Studies conducted in agricultural-oriented countries or communities where farmers or farm family members were not explicit targets were excluded. Reducing psychological distress, promoting mental health, improving mental health outcomes and/or reducing suicide among primary agricultural producers. Purely descriptive studies, as well as those that measured intervention efficacy were included. Studies of interventions with the aim of improving the mental health of solely farmworkers (not producers), studies of substance use disorder interventions, and studies of suicide means restriction were excluded. No control group or comparison is required. Blundall, J 1986 The initial response from a community mental health center. No control group or comparison is required. No measurable outcome is required. Peer-reviewed studies are included. No restrictions on the type of studi geographic region, or publication dates. Articles published in languages oth than English were excluded. Blundall, J 1986 The initial response from a community mental health center. Blundall, J 1986 The initial response from a community mental health center. No measurable outcome is required. Peer-reviewed studies are included. No restrictions on the type of stud geographic region, or publication dates. Articles published in languages oth than English were excluded. Intervention Blundall, J 1986 The initial response from a community mental health center. interventions, and studies of suicide means restriction were excluded. No control group or comparison is required. No measurable outcome is required. Peer-reviewed studies are included. No restrictions on the type of studies, geographic region, or publication dates. Articles published in languages other than English were excluded. Intervention Category Key: Blundall, J 1986 The initial response from a community mental health center. interventions, and studies of suicide means restriction were excluded. No control group or comparison is required. No measurable outcome is required. Peer-reviewed studies are included. No restrictions on the type of studies, geographic region, or publication dates. Articles published in languages other than English were excluded. Intervention Category Key: Blundall, J 1986 The initial response from a community mental health center. interventions, and studies of suicide means restriction were excluded. No control group or comparison is required. No measurable outcome is required. Peer-reviewed studies are included. No restrictions on the type of studies, geographic region, or publication dates. Articles published in languages other than English were excluded. interventions, and studies of suicide means restriction were excluded. No control group or comparison is required. No measurable outcome is required. Peer-reviewed studies are included. No restrictions on the type of studies, geographic region, or publication dates. Articles published in languages other than English were excluded. Blundall, J 1986 The initial response from a community mental health center. No control group or comparison is required. No measurable outcome is required. Peer-reviewed studies are included. No restrictions on the type of studies, geographic region, or publication dates. Articles published in languages other than English were excluded. Blundall, J 1986 The initial response from a community mental health center. interventions, and studies of suicide means restriction were excluded. No control group or comparison is required. No measurable outcome is required. Peer-reviewed studies are included. No restrictions on the type of studies, geographic region, or publication dates. Articles published in languages other than English were excluded. interventions, and studies of suicide means restriction were excluded. No control group or comparison is required. No measurable outcome is required. Peer-reviewed studies are included. No restrictions on the type of studies, geographic region, or publication dates. Articles published in languages other than English were excluded. interventions, and studies of suicide means restriction were excluded. No control group or comparison is required. No measurable outcome is required. Peer-reviewed studies are included. No restrictions on the type of studies, geographic region, or publication dates. Articles published in languages other than English were excluded. Appendix B: interventions, and studies of suicide means restriction were excluded. No control group or comparison is required. No measurable outcome is required. Peer-reviewed studies are included. No restrictions on the type of studies, geographic region, or publication dates. Articles published in languages other than English were excluded. interventions, and studies of suicide means restriction were excluded. No control group or comparison is required. No measurable outcome is required. Peer-reviewed studies are included. No restrictions on the type of studies, geographic region, or publication dates. Articles published in languages other than English were excluded. interventions, and studies of suici means restriction were excluded No control group or comparison is required. No measurable outcome is required. Peer-reviewed studies are included. No restrictions on the type of stud geographic region, or publication dates. Articles published in languages oth than English were excluded. 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No restrictions on the type of stud geographic region, or publication dates Agricultural health and medicine education: Engaging rural It's really not easy to get help Farmer suicides and the function of death in neoliberal biopolitics International Political Sociology ✖ 131 Badami Suicide as a counter-narrative in Wayanad, southern India: The Getting help: The first step Biocultural restoration of traditional agriculture: Cultural, environmental, and economic outcomes of Lo'i Kalo restoration in He'eia, O'ahu Sustainability Getting help: The first step Biocultural restoration of traditional agriculture: Cultural, environmental, and economic outcomes of Lo'i Kalo restoration in He'eia, O'ahu Sustainability ✖ Does 'no pesticide' reduce suicides? 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Rural Remote Health Suicide in rural areas: An updated review of the literature Multilevel community-based culturally situated interventions and community impact: An ecological per-spective Preventing Suicide: A Global Imperative; World Health Organization Blundall, J 1986 The initial response from a community mental health center. interventions, and studies of suicide means restriction were excluded. No control group or comparison is required. OutcomeNo measurable outcome is required. Peer-reviewed studies are included.No restrictions on the type of studies, geographic region, or publication dates. Articles published in languages other than English were excluded.Appendix B: Blundall, J 1986 The initial response from a community mental health center. The Extension service as key mechanism for research and services delivery for prevention of mental health disorders in rural areas interventions, and studies of suicide means restriction were excluded. No control group or comparison is required. OutcomeNo measurable outcome is required. Peer-reviewed studies are included.No restrictions on the type of studies, geographic region, or publication dates. Articles published in languages other than English were excluded.Appendix B: Blundall, J 1986 The initial response from a community mental health center. interventions, and studies of suicide means restriction were excluded. No control group or comparison is required. OutcomeNo measurable outcome is required. Peer-reviewed studies are included.No restrictions on the type of studies, geographic region, or publication dates. Articles published in languages other than English were excluded.Appendix B: Blundall, J 1986The initial response from a community mental health center. Blundall, J 1986The initial response from a community mental health center. No measurable outcome is required. Peer-reviewed studies are included.No restrictions on the type of stud geographic region, or publication dates. Articles published in languages oth than English were excluded. interventions, and studies of suicide means restriction were excluded. No control group or comparison is required. No measurable outcome is required. Peer-reviewed studies are included.No restrictions on the type of studies, geographic region, or publication dates. Articles published in languages other than English were excluded. interventions, and studies of suicide means restriction were excluded. No control group or comparison is required. No measurable outcome is required. Peer-reviewed studies are included.No restrictions on the type of studies, geographic region, or publication dates. Articles published in languages other than English were excluded. interventions, and studies of suicide means restriction were excluded. No control group or comparison is required. No measurable outcome is required. Peer-reviewed studies are included.No restrictions on the type of studies, geographic region, or publication dates. Articles published in languages other than English were excluded. interventions, and studies of suicide means restriction were excluded. No control group or comparison is required. No measurable outcome is required. Peer-reviewed studies are included.No restrictions on the type of studies, geographic region, or publication dates. Articles published in languages other than English were excluded.Appendix B: