How the Pandemic Has Further Isolated Farmers | Civil Eats

How the Pandemic Has Further Isolated Farmers

Drew DeSutter tends to the cows on the family farm in New Windsor, Illinois. (Photo credit: Steve Davis for The Midwest Center for Investigative Reporting)

When COVID-19 first hit, Illinois farmers Adrienne and Drew DeSutter weren’t sure how the pandemic would affect their lives. Farmers already deal with a lot of uncertainty and lead isolated lives, they said.

But the coronavirus pandemic has exacerbated farmers’ feelings of isolation, according to a recent survey from the American Farm Bureau Federation. The percentage who said social isolation affects farmers’ mental health jumped more than 20 percent in 2020 compared to 2019.

COVID-19 took away some of the only outlets farmers have for interacting with others, such as religious gatherings and farm bureau meetings.

“What we experienced in my own home is that, even though our day-to-day life didn’t change as much, we’ve lost nearly all of our non-isolating events,” said Adrienne DeSutter, who lives outside of Galesburg. “So not only do we have this added stress of uncertainty, but now we don’t even get to go to those stress-alleviating things.”

Her husband agreed.

“Those (farm bureau) meetings are kind of a way for me to get out and be around other people that aren’t family members, that aren’t coworkers,” he said. “When you don’t have that access, I think you can feel even more isolated.”

Morning Consult conducted the survey for the national farm bureau in December, and the results were released in January. It sampled 2,000 rural adults, farmers and farmhands, asking questions about mental health and COVID-19.

In 2019, 46 percent of farmers said isolation affected their mental health either “some” or “a lot.” In 2020, that number was 68 percent, according to the survey.

The jump really stood out to Ray Atkinson, a spokesman for the farm bureau federation.

“Farmers spend a lot of time alone on the farm, working in isolation, (from) early in the morning before the sun comes up until late at night when it’s down,” he said. “So I think that’s a really significant finding.”

Atkinson said the consequences of the pandemic — such as the closing of restaurants and schools, big customers of farms — challenged farmers.

“If you had a processing plant that processes mozzarella cheese for restaurants and those shut down because the restaurants shut down, now those farmers are dumping milk and they have no place for their product to go,” he said.

newsmatch 2023 banner - donate to support civil eats

Farmers already experienced a great deal of stress. According to the survey, the top four factors affecting mental health for rural adults are financial issues, fear of losing the farm, an uncertain future and the state of the farm economy.

Experts said other stressors include unpredictable weather and markets and the fact that farming is a lifestyle, not just a business. The work comes with constant family interaction that can lead to family and marital strain.

But the COVID-19 pandemic added another layer to the stress.

According to the survey, 66 percent of farmers said the coronavirus has affected their mental health, while about half of rural adults did. Farmers experienced nervousness or anxiety more often than rural adults during the pandemic, according to the survey.

Curtis Harms, who comes from a long line of Illinois farmers, said he’s also struggled with seclusion brought on by the pandemic.

Diagnosed with depression, Harms credited an Agriculture Leaders of Tomorrow meeting last year with helping him become more comfortable talking about it. When he shared what he was going through, people’s faces flashed with recognition, he said.

“We all deal with stress and some of us deal with it better than others. But it’s a lot more common than most people think and I think that’s what happens to stigma too,” he said. “Everybody feels like, ‘Well, I don’t want to say anything because I don’t want to be the weird person,’ when in all likelihood, you talk to three other people and at least one other person is going to feel the same way you do.”

According to the survey, 75 percent of rural adults said that mental health is very important, a 6 percent increase from 2019.

We’ll bring the news to you.

Get the weekly Civil Eats newsletter, delivered to your inbox.

Also, 87 percent of farmers said it’s important to reduce the stigma around mental health in agriculture, and 59 percent said it’s very important.

For those currently struggling through the pandemic, Drew DeSutter wants them to know that getting help is a sign of strength, not a weakness. The survey shows that a third of rural adults have personally sought help for mental health.

“They’re not alone by any means, there are a lot of people who struggle with it,” he said. “Seeking out help in my book is not a weakness. It’s being able to recognize that there’s an issue and get help. That to me is more powerful.”

This article was originally published by the Midwest Center for Investigative Reporting, and is reprinted with permission.

Marissa Plescia is an intern at the Midwest Center for Investigative Reporting. She graduated from the University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign with a major in journalism and a minor in public relations. She also worked with The Daily Illini as a features reporter and later assistant features editor. Read more >

Like the story?
Join the conversation.

More from

Rural America

Featured

Injured divers work on various exercises in a small rehabilitation room at the hospital. Dr. Henzel Roberto Pérez, the deputy director of information management at the hospital, said that one of the many problems with the lobster diving industry is “Children are working for these companies. At least one of the companies is from the United States.” (Photo credit: Jacky Muniello)

Diving—and Dying—for Red Gold: The Human Cost of Honduran Lobster

The Walton Family Foundation invested in a Honduran lobster fishery, targeting its sustainability and touting its success. Ten years later, thousands of workers have been injured or killed. 

Popular

This Indigenous Cook Wants to Help Readers Decolonize Their Diets

author Sara Calvosa Olson and the cover of her book about indigenous foods and foodways, Chimi Nu'am. (Photo courtesy of Sara Calvosa Olson)

This #GivingTuesday, Help Us Celebrate Our Successes

prize winning squash for giving tuesday!

Can Virtual Fences Help More Ranchers Adopt Regenerative Grazing Practices?

A goat grazing with one of them virtual fencing collars on its neck. (Photo credit: Lisa Held)

With Season 2, ‘High on the Hog’ Deepens the Story of the Nation’s Black Food Traditions

Stephen Satterfield and Jessica B. Harris watching the sunset at the beach, in a still from Netflix's High on the Hog Season 2. (Photo courtesy of Netflix)