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How Do Australian Health Professionals Working in a Rural Emergency Department Perceive Their Work With People With Mental Illness? An Interview Study

AI Summary
  • Care in rural EDs is relational and adaptive, relying on empathy, teamwork and local knowledge rather than formal systems and protocols.
  • Education and training are largely experiential and relational, emphasising shared learning, mentoring and accessible specialist support for staff wellbeing and competence.
  • Small-town mentality creates visibility, stigma and overlapping professional roles, requiring context-bound responses and reflective spaces to manage moral strain.
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Int J Ment Health Nurs. 2026 Aug;35(4):e70293. doi: 10.1111/inm.70293.

ABSTRACT

Emergency departments (EDs) are often the first point of contact for individuals in mental health crisis. In rural Australia, health professionals face distinctive challenges shaped by limited resources, workforce shortages and overlapping professional and community roles. These conditions influence how health professionals perceive, engage with and respond to people experiencing mental health crisis. To explore how health professionals working in a rural emergency department perceive their work with people presenting with mental illness. A qualitative design using semi-structured interviews was employed with nine participants (six nurses and three medical officers) from a rural ED in South West Queensland. Data were analysed using Braun and Clarke’s Reflexive Thematic Analysis. Three interrelated themes captured participants’ perceptions: safety as relational and negotiated practice, education and training as relational and experiential learning and small-town mentality. Findings suggested that care in rural EDs is sustained less by systems and protocols than by human connection, local knowledge and moral endurance. Participants described navigating safety through empathy and teamwork, constructing learning through shared experience rather than formal training and managing the tensions of visibility, stigma and relationships in close-knit communities. Work with people with mental health illness in rural emergency settings is perceived as relational, adaptive and context bound. Building sustainable rural mental health responses may benefit from embedding specialist support, accessible education and reflective spaces that honour both professional wellbeing and community interdependence.

PMID:42389863 | DOI:10.1111/inm.70293

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