Mental Health Counselors’ Perceptions of Rural Women Clients

Lisbeth A. Leagjeld, Phillip Waalkes, Maribeth Jorgensen

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Researchers have frequently described rural women as invisible, yet at 28 million, they represent over half of the rural population in the United States. We conducted a transcendental phenomenological study using semistructured interviews and artifacts to explore 12 Midwestern rural-based mental health counselors’ experiences counseling rural women through a feminist lens. Overall, we found eight themes organized under two main categories: (a) perceptions of work with rural women (e.g., counselors’ sense of purpose, a rural heritage, a lack of training for work with rural women, and the need for additional research); and (b) perceptions of rural women and mental health (e.g., challenges, resiliency, protective factors, and barriers to mental health services for rural women). We offer specific implications for counselors to address the unique mental health needs of rural women, including hearing their stories through their personal lenses and offering them opportunities for empowerment at their own pace.
Original languageAmerican English
JournalThe Professional Counselor
Volume11
DOIs
StatePublished - 2021

Keywords

  • feminist
  • mental health counselors
  • perceptions
  • phenomenological
  • rural women

Disciplines

  • Student Counseling and Personnel Services

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