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| Rural residents can help one another work through mental crisis or illness by learning MHFA. |
Mental health care in rural America has always been more challenging to ask for, find and afford than in more populated parts of the country. A program that trains laypeople may offer rural residents in mentally stressful situations or suffering from untreated mental illness the best path toward getting the help they need.
The National Council for Mental Wellbeing’s Mental Health First Aid for Rural Communities works with "people not necessarily in the health professions to give them the tools they need to recognize and respond to the signs of mental health or substance use challenges," reports Liz Carey of The Daily Yonder. The training teaches participants that while they are not there to treat or diagnosis mental health problems, they are equipped with the skills and knowledge to support a family or friend until professional care is available.
A community that adds this training to its safety net toolbox is spending time incorporating a process that makes a difference. Carey writes, "Studies have consistently shown that it works — more than 90 peer-reviewed studies over the past 15 years have shown that MHFA has a lasting impact."
Jamie Hagenbuch, program manager at the Mental Health First Aid at Madison County Rural Health Council in Cazenovia, New York, told Carey, "I think rural communities definitely don’t have the resources that cities and urban communities do, so having the initial skills to be able to recognize if somebody’s becoming unwell and how to approach them and know what resources do exist, as well as being able to navigate them to those resources, is critical."
Mental Health First Aid training can help "anyone in a rural community to spot the signs of someone struggling with a mental health issue and to be able to step in to help," Carey explains. "A study in 2021 of Cooperative Extension agents in Mississippi found that 62.5% of the participants in the MHFA training programs used their skills six months after training."

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