Data from Farm Stress Line shows slightly lower call number in 2025
Harvest has come and gone for the farmers of Saskatchewan and they can relax a little knowing they are no longer at the mercy of Mother Nature. However, the stress for producers doesn’t end with harvest, especially in the midst of a trade war.
Mobile Crisis Services Inc. is the company contracted by the Government of Saskatchewan to run the Farmer’s Stress Line. They said the stresses of farming can often lead to impacts in other areas of life. Executive Director Dana Wilkins said that the two issues farmers call in with the most are around managing their marriages, and dealing with the isolation of being on a farm.
“I think that there’s probably more farmers that are suffering stress than call in. I think they’re just kind of taught from an early age ‘you’re tougher than that, suck it up’ kind of thing. Reaching out for help, I think, is a stigma that’s being sort of attacked and challenged through media and other movements, which is helpful to get them more okay with calling. We do tend to get calls from another family member for the person that’s suffering on behalf of them.”
Wilkins added, “The farming communities are farther apart and larger farms, bigger operations, it seems now. So the problems are more complex and potentially interrelated.”



