American Farmers Confront a Mental Health Crisis

  • Contacts to Farm Aid’s hotline more than doubled last year
  • U.S. senators pushed for mental-health provisions in Farm Bill
A farm near Loganville, WisconsinPhotographer: Lauren Justice/Bloomberg
Lock
This article is for subscribers only.

The worst agricultural downturnBloomberg Terminal since the 1980s is taking its toll on the emotional well-being of American farmers.

In Kentucky, Montana and Florida, operators at Farm Aid’s hotline have seen a doubling of contacts for everything from financial counseling to crisis assistance. In Wisconsin, Dale Meyer has started holding monthly forums in the basement of his Loganville church following the suicide of a fellow parishioner, a farmer who’d fallen on hard times. In Minnesota, rural counselor Ted Matthews says he’s getting more and more calls.