International declaration on rural mental health research: 10 guiding principles and standards

Russell Roberts, Sarah Anne Munoz, Karla Thorpe, Hazel Dalton, Leith Deacon, David Meredith, Mark Gussy, Steve F. Bain, Christian Swann, Maria Lindstrom, Jordi Blanch, Annette Beautrais, Helene Silverblatt, Luis Salvador-Carulla, Finola Colgan, Tammy D. Heinz, David Perkins, Sean Russell, Laura Grattidge

Research output: Contribution to journalEditorialpeer-review

Abstract

Rural communities have unique mental health needs and challenges which are often related to the uniqueness of the community itself. On a per-capita basis, the investment in rural mental health research is far less than that in urban communities. Added to this, rural communities are often at risk of researchers, based in large urban universities, visiting, conducting the research with minimal engagement with local stakeholders and limited understanding of the community's social-service-environmental context. Often this research leaves no visible benefit to the community with respect to increased knowledge, resources or community capacity. This commentary is based on the insights of a panel of authors from 9 countries, each with extensive experience of rural mental health research and work. And it seeks to stimulate the discourse on responsible rural mental health practice. The aim of this commentary is to provide a reference on research practice for novice and experienced researchers on rural mental health research and practice, to assist policymakers, government and funding bodies to establish appropriate standards and guidelines for rural mental health research, and support rural communities to advocate for equity of funding and sustainable research as they engage with researchers, funders and governments. The 10 standards in this declaration will help guide researchers toward research that is beneficial to rural communities and also help develop the local community's research capability, which ultimately will serve to enhance the mental health and well-being of rural communities.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)611-616
Number of pages6
JournalAustralian Journal of Rural Health
Volume32
Issue number4
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Aug 2024

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