Sociology, with its long-standing preoccupation with processes of urbanisation and industrialisation, has tended to locate certain social concerns, such as mental health, as being largely urban phenomena or ignore the broader spatial dynamics which impact on such phenomena. Mental wellness of people living in rural regions of Australia is of vital sociological concern. Rural regions depend on a diversity of healthy, positive citizens to work and contribute to communities long into their lives. The reality is the opposite, with studies across Australia finding people living in rural regions and remote areas to be generally of poorer health than those in urban areas
Objective: Rural Australians face particular difficulties in accessing mental health care. This pape...
There are disproportionately higher and inconsistently distributed rates of recorded suicides in rur...
Objective: This paper outlines the methods and baseline data from a multisite cohort study of the de...
Wide open spaces, watching the changes in the seasons, nature all around, living on and off the land...
Significant demographic, social and economic change has come to characterise much of rural Australia...
[Extract] People with mental illness experience poorer physical health, less access to physical heal...
ABSTRACT: This paper argues that lack of adequate research is a barrier to the long-term improvement...
In this paper the need for further investigation into the mental health of rural Australians will be...
Based on the field work, community work experiences and reflections, the authors looks at how rural ...
The present study sought to understand the rural and remote influences on people's identification of...
This paper argues that lack of adequate research is a barrier to the long-term improvement of the me...
Introduction: Until recently, there has been a significant gap in the literature exploring the issue...
CONTEXT: The significant impact of mental ill health in rural and remote Australia has been well doc...
Background: The individual and contextual factors influencing current mental health and well-being w...
There are disproportionately higher and inconsistently distributed rates of recorded suicides in rur...
Objective: Rural Australians face particular difficulties in accessing mental health care. This pape...
There are disproportionately higher and inconsistently distributed rates of recorded suicides in rur...
Objective: This paper outlines the methods and baseline data from a multisite cohort study of the de...
Wide open spaces, watching the changes in the seasons, nature all around, living on and off the land...
Significant demographic, social and economic change has come to characterise much of rural Australia...
[Extract] People with mental illness experience poorer physical health, less access to physical heal...
ABSTRACT: This paper argues that lack of adequate research is a barrier to the long-term improvement...
In this paper the need for further investigation into the mental health of rural Australians will be...
Based on the field work, community work experiences and reflections, the authors looks at how rural ...
The present study sought to understand the rural and remote influences on people's identification of...
This paper argues that lack of adequate research is a barrier to the long-term improvement of the me...
Introduction: Until recently, there has been a significant gap in the literature exploring the issue...
CONTEXT: The significant impact of mental ill health in rural and remote Australia has been well doc...
Background: The individual and contextual factors influencing current mental health and well-being w...
There are disproportionately higher and inconsistently distributed rates of recorded suicides in rur...
Objective: Rural Australians face particular difficulties in accessing mental health care. This pape...
There are disproportionately higher and inconsistently distributed rates of recorded suicides in rur...
Objective: This paper outlines the methods and baseline data from a multisite cohort study of the de...