“We’re Lucky to Have Doctors at All”; A Qualitative Exploration of Australian Farmers’ Barriers and Facilitators to Health-Related Help-Seeking
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Participants
- Over 18 years of age;
- Owned or worked on a farm to produce goods for sale at a commercial level;
- Lived or worked in any of the three target regions of South Australia;
- Did not report any cognitive impairment that might inhibit their ability to answer questions.
2.2. Recruitment
2.3. Analysis
2.4. Reflexivity
3. Results
3.1. Demographic Characteristics
3.2. Thematic Analysis
3.2.1. Theme 1: Personal Attitudes and Beliefs
Subtheme 1: Independent and Private
“I’m just the sorta person that thinks that you’ve gotta, you gotta set to the task and fix the problem... generally the best person to do that’s yourself because mentally there’s a sort of defeat, fronting up to someone.”(Male, mid 40s #1, SE)
“I’m on medication [for depression] but you know it doesn’t worry me; I don’t advertise the fact that I try … and hide it, you know.”(Male, late 60s, EP)
“People say that they’ve gotta go to the chiropractor, but they won’t tell you they’ve gotta go to the counsellor.”(Male, mid 40s #2, SE)
“When I was acutely..., I was probably ashamed of my depression. I tried never to show my true, total emotion in front of my wife. I tried to do that in private.”(Male, mid 50s, MN)
Subtheme 2: Strength, Toughness and Invincibility
“You need a certain amount of resilience and hardiness.”(Male, mid 40s #2, SE)
“I think it’s built into their character, that farmers are pretty capable, tough, don’t need help, can be independent and can work everything out themselves, which is a big barrier to get over.”(Female, mid 60s, EP)
“I felt like it was a little bit of a cop-out that I went and saw him [the GP]. I knew what the problem was, I just had to fix it.”(Male, mid 40s #1, SE)
“We sorta tend to tough it out a bit longer.”(Male, mid 40s, MN)
“Well, I’m still active, I realise I’m not invincible, and I’m starting to look after myself a bit better I think.”(Male, mid 60s, EP)
“They just really think that they can keep fighting on and that nothing can really happen to them.”(Female, mid 30s, EP)
Subtheme 3: Health Fluctuations Are Expected
“Got a crook back that plays up all the time… But that’s just ongoing; it’s not debilitating, but if it goes out, it’s pretty ordinary for a few days, and you get it right.”(Male, early 60s, EP)
“I dislocated a couple of fingers there yesterday, and I don’t view them as injuries. They’re just part of it, it’s just what happens.”(Male, mid 40s #1, SE)
“It’s just one of those things; you live in a constant area of pain.”(Male, late 50s, SE)
“Well, why wouldn’t ya? Nothing to do by sitting around doing nothing. Might as well keep going, yeah.”(Male, late 50s, SE)
“I don’t go unless I’ve got something wrong.”(Male, late 60s, EP)
“I thought it was very suspicious. I got very sweaty and things started to go a bit pear-shaped.”(Male, late 60s, EP)
“You’re getting around that network, and yeah, I won’t sweep it under the carpet I’ll talk about it.”(Male, mid 40s #1, SE)
“I’m going to react when I have a bad flu. I’m going to lay on the couch and try and convince everybody that I’m very close to death and I’m happy to tell anyone that walks past that I’m only a few breaths away.”(Male, mid 40s #1, SE- in jest)
“Unless you’re feeling really, really crook, but even that you always find something to do … don’t go sitting in the house all day long, no.”(Male, mid 50s, SE)
“You know if you’re feeling flat you might do any easier job, but there’s no days off, ‘cos you live and work at home.”(Male, mid 40s #3, SE)
3.2.2. Theme 2: Farm-Related Barriers
Subtheme 1: The Farm Comes First
“I s’pose the other thing we get in a small community is there’s a lot of pressure to I s’pose provide for your community… There’s just a lota community work to do in a small community and I s’pose that’s something at times just increases your workload but someone’s gotta do it.”(Male, mid 40s, MN)
“Our crop must go in on time; everything’s gotta be right because you know two bad years in a row and you can go from being financially okay to being in deep, deep trouble.”(Male, mid 60s, EP)
So, health wise how many farmers will ignore health-warning signals because of other pressures, especially financial pressures? I’d say a huge amount, and I have also been guilty of the same sin.”(Male, mid 50s, MN)
“But to get that organised, to leave a farm and get everything set-up so that everything keeps going while you’re away? I’ve never achieved it. That’s the sort of thing I think we do miss out on because there’s too much ongoing stuff on farms.”(Female, mid 60s, EP)
“I believe most farmers are under manned to what they should be. I think we’re all short staffed and people are always in a hurry and that’s what makes people get tired, overtired and still work and that’s where the danger comes in.”(Male, mid 50s, EP)
“So it might mean that morning I don’t do Pilates but I’ve got it in the back of my mind that I can stop at any time during the day and do it. It doesn’t have to be done in the house, it doesn’t have to be done in the morning.”(Male, mid-60s MN)
Subtheme 2: Farm Work Is Never Done
“Unfortunately, in our game you just get stuck there, and you just do seven days a week and one week goes into another.”(Male, mid 40s #1, SE)
“If there’s work to be done, you tend to … I’ve never come to this situation where we’ve had something important on and I haven’t been able to do it.”(Male, early 60s, EP)
“If we’re busy we just don’t have a choice, you’ve just got to be busy.”(Male, early 40s, MN)
3.2.3. Theme 3: Health System Barriers
Subtheme 2: Understanding of Farm Life
“You know, I’m sure that people, health professionals in the city, think we are mad. They really do.”(Male, mid 40s #1, SE)
“Overseas-trained doctors, well, I was going to say, doctors, medical people. Because sometimes they are difficult to understand and maybe they find me difficult to understand, so communication can be a problem.”(Male, mid 60s, MN)
Subtheme 3: Travelling to Access Care Costs Time and Money
“Then it might also depend on whether I can access somebody to do that work instead of myself.”(Male, mid 60s, MN)
“I’m not going to drive to [regional centre] for one appointment. I like to be a bit more efficient than that. So, there’s probably more efficiency in heading to [major city], but I’ll still want to work it in with a few other jobs.”(Male, mid 40s #2, SE)
“I think most of the services are down here; it’s just the waiting, the cost and the travel.”(Male, mid 40s, SE)
“All the costs, too. Like, having to come over because we haven’t got the facilities over home. So, that’s where the cost factor comes in too. You know, we’re lucky we’ve got somewhere to stay here in Adelaide, but if you haven’t … If you had to pay for accommodation plus treatments and all of that, it soon adds up.”(Female, mid 40s, EP)
3.2.4. Theme 4: Family and Friends Support My Health Needs
“While I’m a firm believer in medical intervention for people that are suffering I also believe that the problems that you resolve yourself are better resolved than the ones that are covered up by medication.”(Male, mid 40s #1, SE)
“Their wife will most likely make the appointment and say I’ve made you a doctor’s appointment for 2 o’clock on Thursday and he says yeah fine. May go, may not go.”(Male, mid 40s #1, SE)
“Well, it’s about them trying to get help for a start or get their partner getting them help.”(Male, early 60s, EP)
“Yeah I’ve got a couple of mates that I’ll ring up. It’s not really to talk about the problems but just to say ‘g’day, see how you’re going.”(Male, mid 60s, MN)
“The men walking around on the golf course, and you know they might have just talked about... You know they could joke about it, moan and groan with each other and I just think a lot of communication and that’s good when everyone’s sort of in that same situation.”(Female, mid 30s, EP)
“I guess if you’re down for any length of time, ‘cos you’d know your wife’d tell you.”(Male, mid 40s #2, SE)
“If you can have open communication with a partner and support each other and recognise and have the awareness to recognise that then you can do something about it; nip it in the bud.”(Male, mid 40s #1, SE)
“There are times when you know very well that they should be at the doctor and they wait until it’s a lot worse before they go and that has consequences.”(Female, mid 60s, EP)
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Participant Characteristics | Frequency (n) |
---|---|
Total | 15 |
Men | 12 |
Age (years) | |
Mean (±SD) | 51.7 (±12.6) |
Region | |
Mid North | 4 |
South East | 4 |
Eyre Peninsula | 7 |
Farming experience (years) | |
0–19 | 2 |
20–39 | 10 |
40+ | 3 |
Type of farm | |
Cropping | 6 |
Sheep, cropping | 6 |
Sheep, beef | 1 |
Beef cattle | 1 |
Dairy | 1 |
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Hull, M.J.; Gunn, K.M.; Smith, A.E.; Jones, M.; Dollman, J. “We’re Lucky to Have Doctors at All”; A Qualitative Exploration of Australian Farmers’ Barriers and Facilitators to Health-Related Help-Seeking. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2022, 19, 11075. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph191711075
Hull MJ, Gunn KM, Smith AE, Jones M, Dollman J. “We’re Lucky to Have Doctors at All”; A Qualitative Exploration of Australian Farmers’ Barriers and Facilitators to Health-Related Help-Seeking. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2022; 19(17):11075. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph191711075
Chicago/Turabian StyleHull, Melissa J., Kate M. Gunn, Ashleigh E. Smith, Martin Jones, and James Dollman. 2022. "“We’re Lucky to Have Doctors at All”; A Qualitative Exploration of Australian Farmers’ Barriers and Facilitators to Health-Related Help-Seeking" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 19, no. 17: 11075. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph191711075
APA StyleHull, M. J., Gunn, K. M., Smith, A. E., Jones, M., & Dollman, J. (2022). “We’re Lucky to Have Doctors at All”; A Qualitative Exploration of Australian Farmers’ Barriers and Facilitators to Health-Related Help-Seeking. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 19(17), 11075. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph191711075