FARMING/RANCHING Stressful Occupations
HE-282, January 1998
Farmers/ranchers experience pressure from all directions. While all
of us must contend with inflation and recession or the death of a family member, farmers
have added uncertainties like weather and commodity prices that directly influence their
livelihoods.
Farm/ranch stress stirs up many images racing to town to buy spare parts (and
finding they have to be ordered) . . . listening to the radio and hearing the market drop
daily (and your bin stands filled with last year's crop) . . . rushing to get the hay
baled before a storm . . . watching a hail storm wipe out a year's labor . . . working
late into the night on bone-jarring equipment . . . getting more and more frustrated,
irritated and tired of the whole mess. Still you dare not let on as you meet again with
the loan officer.
Farm/ranch families experience pressure, conflict and uncertainty especially during
harvesting and planting. As feelings of frustration and helplessness build up, they can
lead to intense family problems involving your spouse, children, parents and other
relatives. If left unresolved, these feelings can lead to costly accidents and deaths.
How stressful is farming/ranching?
Farming/ranching has become one of the most stressful and dangerous occupations. The
National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health recently examined 130 occupations
and found laborers and farm/ranch owners had the highest rate of deaths due to
stress-related conditions like heart and artery disease, hypertension, ulcers, and nervous
disorders. Farming/ranching is also dangerous. According to the National Safety Council,
agriculture and mining are the two most hazardous occupations in the country. In 1996, 21
accidental deaths occurred per 100,000 agricultural workers, compared with a national
average of 4 deaths per 100,000 workers for all industries. A recent survey of 2,000
Kentucky farmers found that each year one of every eight farm families experiences an
accident requiring medical attention. Yet farmers are the most underinsured group of
workers around, especially with regard to health and disability insurance.
Contributing to the stress level of the occupation are changes that have taken place.
Farming/ranching has undergone rapid change from being largely a physical occupation to
one that requires more and more mental input. Farmers/ranchers have become managers of
large sums of money, and they are continually pressured by technological advances in
machinery, and production and management advances regarding livestock and crops.
Farm/ranch families face the same stressful events that non-farm/ranch families do like
inflation-recession, threat of nuclear war, death of a spouse or divorce. They also
confront stressful conditions associated with agriculture like machinery breakdowns, death
of a valuable animal, uncontrollable weather, variable crop yield, fluctuating commodity
prices, and handling toxic pesticides.
What is stress?
In the engineering field, stress means the capacity to withstand strain. Structures
have a measurable strength and resistance to strain according to the type and size of
material. If overloading occurs, the structure distorts and breaks.
When applied to people, stress is more complex. Everyone takes in energy (strength)
from the sun, air and food. When people remain relaxed and balanced as they go about their
daily tasks, this energy flows in and out of their bodies in a healthy, harmonious way.
But when they tie themselves up in knots, breathe with short breaths, and tense their
stomachs, shoulders or necks, they experience stress. So, stress is energy in a blocked or
chaotic state.
When you put your body in passing gear to work as fast as possible to bale that hay
before the storm comes, you experience stress. You feel the effects of powerful hormones
being released into the body. Your blood pressure rises, your heart rate quickens, and
your breathing and blood flow accelerate.
If you adjust to the stressful event, you move on into the relaxation response in which
blood pressure goes down to a normal, healthy rate. While occasional operation in passing
gear in an emergency situation does little if any harm, it is dangerous for you to keep
yourself under heavy strain over lengthy periods of time or to experience too many
stressful events at one time. Just like a boiler that bursts under too much pressure, your
body breaks down and your health suffers.
You always have two choices the stress response or the reaction response. If, at
the first warning signs of stress, you just take a moment to relax and breathe deeply, you
will find that you have more energy, can concentrate better, and can actually get more
done in less time. How to do that is explained in the rest of this series.
HE282, January 1998
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