A significant proportion of people live and work in rural areas, and rural
mental health is important wherever psychiatry is practised. There are
inherent difficulties in conducting rural research, due in part to the lack
of an agreed definition of rurality. Mental health is probably better in
rural areas, with the exception of suicide, which remains highest in male
rural residents. A number of aspects of rural life (such as the rural
community, social networks, problems with access, and social exclusion) may
all have particular implications for people with mental health problems.
Further issues such as the effect of rural culture on help-seeking for
mental illness, anonymity in small rural communities and stigma may further
affect the recognition, treatment and maintenance of mental health problems
for people in rural areas. Providing mental health services to remote and
rural locations may be challenging.