Getting Rural Children through the Door: Perceived Barriers to Mental Health Care for School-Aged Children in Rural Areas
With creativity and collaboration, children in rural communities who have the same mental health needs as children in urban areas can achieve access to mental health care. This review of the literature explores barriers to mental health services facing school-aged children residing in rural communi...
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National Rural Education Association
2018-11-01
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Online Access: | https://www.jhseonline.com/index.php/ruraled/article/view/212 |
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doaj-d2baae9860f24efab4b538903da66a3b2020-11-25T02:19:43ZengNational Rural Education AssociationThe Rural Educator0273-446X2643-96622018-11-0139110.35608/ruraled.v39i1.212Getting Rural Children through the Door: Perceived Barriers to Mental Health Care for School-Aged Children in Rural AreasJacob Blackstock0Ki Byung Chae1Gary W. Mauk2Angela McDonald3University of North Carolina at GreensboroUniversity of North Carolina at PembrokeUniversity of North Carolina at PembrokeUniversity of North Carolina at Pembroke With creativity and collaboration, children in rural communities who have the same mental health needs as children in urban areas can achieve access to mental health care. This review of the literature explores barriers to mental health services facing school-aged children residing in rural communities and focuses on how challenges unique to rural communities affect the type of care rural children ultimately receive. This review aligns with the NREA Research Agenda priority area “access to counseling/mental health services” (NREA, 2018). The discussion incorporates national trends in the treatment of children with mental health concerns and highlights some surprising facts about the state of mental health care in rural school and examines the following factors: (1) belief, (2) family poverty, (3) school support, (4) community resources, and (5) awareness. The review concludes by outlining opportunities for advocacy and proposed solutions for improving mental health care access for rural children and suggesting directions for future research. https://www.jhseonline.com/index.php/ruraled/article/view/212awareness; mental health care; poverty; rural community; school-aged children; stigma |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Jacob Blackstock Ki Byung Chae Gary W. Mauk Angela McDonald |
spellingShingle |
Jacob Blackstock Ki Byung Chae Gary W. Mauk Angela McDonald Getting Rural Children through the Door: Perceived Barriers to Mental Health Care for School-Aged Children in Rural Areas The Rural Educator awareness; mental health care; poverty; rural community; school-aged children; stigma |
author_facet |
Jacob Blackstock Ki Byung Chae Gary W. Mauk Angela McDonald |
author_sort |
Jacob Blackstock |
title |
Getting Rural Children through the Door: Perceived Barriers to Mental Health Care for School-Aged Children in Rural Areas |
title_short |
Getting Rural Children through the Door: Perceived Barriers to Mental Health Care for School-Aged Children in Rural Areas |
title_full |
Getting Rural Children through the Door: Perceived Barriers to Mental Health Care for School-Aged Children in Rural Areas |
title_fullStr |
Getting Rural Children through the Door: Perceived Barriers to Mental Health Care for School-Aged Children in Rural Areas |
title_full_unstemmed |
Getting Rural Children through the Door: Perceived Barriers to Mental Health Care for School-Aged Children in Rural Areas |
title_sort |
getting rural children through the door: perceived barriers to mental health care for school-aged children in rural areas |
publisher |
National Rural Education Association |
series |
The Rural Educator |
issn |
0273-446X 2643-9662 |
publishDate |
2018-11-01 |
description |
With creativity and collaboration, children in rural communities who have the same mental health needs as children in urban areas can achieve access to mental health care. This review of the literature explores barriers to mental health services facing school-aged children residing in rural communities and focuses on how challenges unique to rural communities affect the type of care rural children ultimately receive. This review aligns with the NREA Research Agenda priority area “access to counseling/mental health services” (NREA, 2018). The discussion incorporates national trends in the treatment of children with mental health concerns and highlights some surprising facts about the state of mental health care in rural school and examines the following factors: (1) belief, (2) family poverty, (3) school support, (4) community resources, and (5) awareness. The review concludes by outlining opportunities for advocacy and proposed solutions for improving mental health care access for rural children and suggesting directions for future research.
|
topic |
awareness; mental health care; poverty; rural community; school-aged children; stigma |
url |
https://www.jhseonline.com/index.php/ruraled/article/view/212 |
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