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Kansas State University is one of four universities conducting a study on health and wellness of farm and ranch families. | Download this photo.

Farm families encouraged to participate in multi-state health, wellness study

Declining farm profitability and land values are backdrop for survey

May 4, 2018

MANHATTAN, Kan. – A survey is about to land in some farmers’ and ranchers’ mailboxes across several states and a group of extension professionals is strongly encouraging recipients to fill it out and send it back in.

The questionnaire is being sent to farmers and ranchers chosen at random by the Rural Family Support Network, a team of extension professionals at four universities.

Set against a backdrop of falling commodity prices, farm profitability and land values, the survey was developed to gauge farmers’ and ranchers’ health and wellness. The results will help guide decisions regarding what resources might be helpful to farmers, ranchers and their families, said Charlotte Shoup Olsen, a professor at Kansas State University.

“The more people who participate, the more accurate a picture we will have when it comes to prioritizing programs and services that can be made available in our communities,” said Olsen, a family systems specialist with K-State Research and Extension.

The survey is voluntary and anonymous – participants are told not to include their name when they return it - and will take 15-20 minutes to complete. It is being sent to 400 families in each of four states.

Some of the questions are personal, Olsen said, including religious status, whether an individual has an off-farm job, farm cash net income or loss and others, but the study’s authors are not looking for any individual’s situation. Rather they are concerned with general trends in health and wellness.

The Rural Family Support Network, led by extension specialist Andrea Bjornestad of South Dakota State University, is made up of extension professionals from SDSU, Michigan State University, Kansas State University, and the University of Missouri. More information is available by contacting Bjornestad at Andrea.Bjornestad@sdstate.edu or 605-688-5125.




Source

Charlotte Shoup Olsen
colsen@ksu.edu

Written by

Mary Lou Peter
913-856-2335, Ext. 130
mlpeter@ksu.edu

At a glance

Surveys looking to assess the health and wellness of farm and ranch families will soon be landing in some mailboxes in four states. Participation is completely anonymous and voluntary and will help extension professionals determine what resources and services should be available.

Notable quote

“The more people who participate, the more accurate a picture we will have when it comes to prioritizing programs and services that can be made available in our communities.”

-- Charlotte Shoup Olsen, a family systems specialist with K-State Research and Extension.

 

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K‑State Research and Extension is a short name for the Kansas State University Agricultural Experiment Station and Cooperative Extension Service, a program designed to generate and distribute useful knowledge for the wellbeing of Kansans.
Supported by county, state, federal and private funds, the program has county extension offices, experiment fields, area extension offices and regional research centers statewide. Its headquarters is on the K‑State campus in Manhattan.