By AJ Dome
GARDEN CITY — Kansas mental health experts want rural residents to be aware of available resources as they work to enhance mental health services across more of the state.
NAMI Kansas executive director Sherrie Vaughn said she and her staff are preparing for a rural mental health summit on April 9 in Kiowa, a community of about 900 people in south-central Kansas, to bring the conversation about mental health care to more rural and frontier areas.
The summit is a continuation of the nonprofit agency’s Standing in the Gap series that began in 2023 in Dodge City. NAMI Kansas southwest steering committee chairwoman Itzel Moya said the initial event and four subsequent sessions have been “a great way for rural and frontier communities to bring light to mental health topics and resources.”
At that initial event, mental health experts and agricultural producers shared stories about their own mental health struggles and vocalized a need …