Elder abuse is doing something or failing to do something that results in harm to an elderly person or puts a helpless older person at risk of harm. This includes
- Physical, sexual and emotional abuse
- Neglecting or deserting an older person you are responsible for
- Taking or misusing an elderly person's money or property
Elder abuse can happen within the family. It can also happen in settings such as hospitals or nursing homes or in the community. Elder abuse is a serious problem in this country. All 50 states have laws against elder abuse. The laws differ, but all states have systems for reporting suspected abuse. Generally, adult protective services (APS) agencies receive and investigate reports of suspected elder abuse.
Generally Accepted Definitions
Elder abuse is an umbrella term referring to any knowing, intentional, or negligent act by a caregiver or any other person that causes harm or a serious risk of harm to a vulnerable adult.
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Physical abuse is inflicting, or threatening to inflict, physical pain or injury on a vulnerable elder, or depriving them of a basic need.
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Sexual abuse is the infliction of non-consensual sexual contact of any kind.
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Emotional or psychological abuse is the infliction of mental or emotional anguish or distress on an elder person through verbal or nonverbal acts.
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Financial or material exploitation is the illegal taking, misuse, or concealment of funds, property, or assets of a vulnerable elder.
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Neglect is the refusal or failure by those responsible to provide food, shelter, health care, or protection for a vulnerable elder.
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Self-neglect is characterized as the behavior of an elderly person that threatens his/her own health or safety.
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Abandonment - The desertion of a vulnerable elder by anyone who has assumed the responsibility for care or custody of that person.
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Physical Abuse
Physical abuse is physical force or violence that results in bodily injury, pain, or impairment. It includes assault, battery, and inappropriate restraint.
Who are the perpetrators?
Perpetrators may be acquaintances, sons, daughters, grandchildren, or others. Physical abuse that is perpetrated by spouses or intimate partners in order to gain power and control over the victim is described in the section on domestic violence. Perpetrators are likely to be unmarried, to live with their victims, and to be unemployed. Some perpetrators have alcohol or substance abuse problems. Some are caregivers for those they abuse.
Who is at risk?
As a group, victims of physical abuse do not differ significantly from seniors who are not abused.
What are the indicators?
Indicators are signs or clues that abuse has occurred. Physical indicators may include injuries or bruises, while behavioral indicators are ways victims and abusers act or interact with each other. Many of the indicators listed below can be explained by other causes (e.g. a bruise may be the result of an accidental fall) and no single indicator can be taken as conclusive proof. Rather, one should look for patterns or clusters of indicators that suggest a problem.
Physical indicators
- Sprains, dislocations, fractures, or broken bones
- Burns from cigarettes, appliances, or hot water
- Abrasions on arms, legs, or torso that resemble rope or strap marks
- Internal injuries evidenced by pain, difficulty with normal functioning of organs, and bleeding from body orifices
- Bruises. The following types of bruises are rarely accidental:
- Bilateral bruising to the arms (may indicate that the person has been shaken, grabbed, or restrained)
- Bilateral bruising of the inner thighs (may indicate sexual abuse)
- "Wrap around" bruises that encircle an older person's arms, legs, or torso (may indicate that the person has been physically restrained)
- Multicolored bruises (indicating that they were sustained over time)
- Injuries healing through "secondary intention" (indicating that they did not receive appropriate care)
- Signs of traumatic hair and tooth loss
- Behavioral indicators
- Injuries are unexplained or explanations are implausible (they do not "fit" with the injuries observed)
- Family members provide different explanations of how injuries were sustained
- A history of similar injuries, and/or numerous or suspicious hospitalizations
- Victims are brought to different medical facilities for treatment to prevent medical practitioners from observing a pattern of abuse
- Delay between onset of injury and seeking medical care
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Sexual Abuse
Sexual abuse is any form of non-consensual physical contact. It includes rape, molestation, or any sexual conduct with a person who lacks the mental capacity to exercise consent.
Who are the perpetrators?
Perpetrators of sexual abuse include attendants, employees of care facilities, family members (including spouses), and others.
Who is at risk?
- Women
- Persons with physical or cognitive disabilities
- Persons who lack social support and are isolated
What are the indicators?
Indicators are signs or clues that abuse has occurred. Physical indicators may include injuries or bruises, while behavioral indicators are ways victims and abusers act or interact with each other. Some of the indicators listed below can be explained by other causes (e.g. inappropriate or unusual behavior may signal dementia or drug interactions) and no single indicator can be taken as conclusive proof. Rather, one should look for patterns or clusters of indicators that suggest a problem.
Physical indicators
Behavioral indicators
- Inappropriate sex-role relationship between victim and suspect
- Inappropriate, unusual, or aggressive sexual behavior
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Emotional or Psychological Abuse
Psychological abuse is the willful infliction of mental or emotional anguish by threat, humiliation, or other verbal or nonverbal conduct.
Cultural values and expectations play a significant role in how psychological abuse is manifested and how it affects its victims.
Who are the perpetrators?
Perpetrators may be family members, caregivers, or acquaintances.
Who is at risk?
Persons who are isolated and lack social or emotional support are particularly vulnerable.
What are the indicators?
Indicators are signs or clues that abuse has occurred. Physical indicators may include somatic changes or decline, while behavioral indicators are ways victims and abusers act or interact. Some of the indicators listed below can be explained by other causes and no single indicator can be taken as conclusive proof. Rather, one should look for patterns or clusters of indicators that suggest a problem.
Physical indicators
The perpetrator:
Isolates the elder emotionally by not speaking to, touching, or comforting him or her
The elder:
- Has sleeping disorders
- Exhibits depression and confusion
- Cowers in the presence of abuser
- Is emotionally upset, agitated, withdrawn, and non responsive
- Exhibits unusual behavior usually attributed to dementia (e.g., sucking, biting, rocking)
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Financial Abuse
Elder financial abuse spans a broad spectrum of conduct, including:
- Taking money or property
- Forging an older person's signature
- Getting an older person to sign a deed, will, or power of attorney through deception, coercion, or undue influence
- Using the older person's property or possessions without permission
- Promising lifelong care in exchange for money or property and not following through on the promise
- Confidence crimes ("cons") are the use of deception to gain victims' confidence
- Scams are fraudulent or deceptive acts
- Fraud is the use of deception, trickery, false pretence, or dishonest acts or statements for financial gain
- Telemarketing scams. Perpetrators call victims and use deception, scare tactics, or exaggerated claims to get them to send money. They may also make charges against victims' credit cards without authorization
Who are the perpetrators?
Family members, including sons, daughters, grandchildren, or spouses. They may:
- Have substance abuse, gambling, or financial problems
- Stand to inherit and feel justified in taking what they believe is "almost" or "rightfully" theirs
- Fear that their older family member will get sick and use up their savings, depriving the abuser of an inheritance
- Have had a negative relationship with the older person and feel a sense of "entitlement"
- Have negative feelings toward siblings or other family members whom they want to prevent from acquiring or inheriting the older person's assets
Predatory individuals who seek out vulnerable seniors with the intent of exploiting them. They may:
- Profess to love the older person ("sweetheart scams")
- Seek employment as personal care attendants, counselors, etc. to gain access
- Identify vulnerable persons by driving through neighborhoods (to find persons who are alone and isolated) or contact recently widowed persons they find through newspaper death announcements
- Move from community to community to avoid being apprehended (transient criminals)
Unscrupulous professionals or businesspersons, or persons posing as such. They may:
- Overcharge for services or products
- Use deceptive or unfair business practices
- Use their positions of trust or respect to gain compliance
Who is at risk?
The following conditions or factors increase an older person's risk of being victimized:
- Isolation
- Loneliness
- Recent losses
- Physical or mental disabilities
- Lack of familiarity with financial matters
- Have family members who are unemployed and/or have substance abusers problems
Why are the elderly attractive targets?
- Persons over the age of 50 control over 70% of the nation's wealth
- Many seniors do not realize the value of their assets (particularly homes that have appreciated markedly)
- The elderly are likely to have disabilities that make them dependent on others for help. These "helpers" may have access to homes and assets, and may exercise significant influence over the older person
- They may have predictable patterns (e.g. because older people are likely to receive monthly checks, abusers can predict when an older people will have money on hand or need to go to the bank)
- Severely impaired individuals are also less likely to take action against their abusers as a result of illness or embarrassment
- Abusers may assume that frail victims will not survive long enough to follow through on legal interventions, or that they will not make convincing witnesses
- Some older people are unsophisticated about financial matters
- Advances in technology have made managing finances more complicated
What are the indicators? What are the indicators?
Indicators are signs or clues that abuse has occurred. Some of the indicators listed below can be explained by other causes or factors and no single indicator can be taken as conclusive proof. Rather, one should look for patterns or clusters of indicators that suggest a problem.
- Unpaid bills, eviction notices, or notices to discontinue utilities
- Withdrawals from bank accounts or transfers between accounts that the older person cannot explain
- Bank statements and canceled checks no longer come to the elder's home
- New "best friends"
- Legal documents, such as powers of attorney, which the older person didn't understand at the time he or she signed them
- Unusual activity in the older person's bank accounts including large, unexplained withdrawals, frequent transfers between accounts, or ATM withdrawals
- The care of the elder is not commensurate with the size of his/her estate
- A caregiver expresses excessive interest in the amount of money being spent on the older person
- Belongings or property are missing
- Suspicious signatures on checks or other documents
- Absence of documentation about financial arrangements
- Implausible explanations given about the elderly person's finances by the elder or the caregiver
- The elder is unaware of or does not understand financial arrangements that have been made for him or her
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Neglect And Self-Neglect
Neglect is the failure of caregivers to fulfill their responsibilities to provide needed care.
Active" neglect refers to behavior that is willful - that is, the caregiver intentionally withholds care or necessities. The neglect may be motivated by financial gain (e.g. the caregiver stands to inherit) or reflect interpersonal conflicts
"Passive" neglect refers to situations in which the caregiver is unable to fulfill his or her care giving responsibilities as a result of illness, disability, stress, ignorance, lack of maturity, or lack of resources
Self neglect refers to situations in which there is no perpetrator and neglect is the result of the older person refusing care.
Who are the perpetrators?
Perpetrators may be paid attendants, family members, employees of long term care facilities, or others
Caregivers who lack adequate skills, training, time, or energy
Caregivers who are mentally ill, or who have alcohol, substance abuse or other mental health problems
In self-neglect cases, there are no perpetrators
Who is at risk?
Persons with physical or mental disabilities who depend on others for care.
Persons with high care needs. The literature on care giving suggests that certain conditions are particularly stressful to caregivers. These include fluctuations in the older person's need for care, disturbed sleep, incontinence, and lack of support from other family members.
Self-neglect is often associated with mental health problems, including substance abuse, dementia, and depression.
What are the indicators?
Indicators are signs or clues that neglect has occurred. Indicators of neglect include the condition of the older person's home (environmental indicators), physical signs of poor care, and behavioral characteristics of the caregiver and/or older person. Some of the indicators listed below may not signal neglect but rather reflect lifestyle choices, lack of resources, or mental health problems, etc. One should look for patterns or clusters of indicators that suggest a problem.
Signs of neglect observed in the home
- Absence of necessities including food, water, heat
- Inadequate living environment evidenced by lack of utilities, sufficient space, and ventilation
- Animal or insect infestations
- Signs of medication mismanagement, including empty or unmarked bottles or outdated prescriptions
- Housing is unsafe as a result of disrepair, faulty wiring, inadequate sanitation, substandard cleanliness, or architectural barriers
Physical indicators
- Poor personal hygiene including soiled clothing, dirty nails and skin, matted or lice infested hair, odors, and the presence of feces or urine
- Unclothed, or improperly clothed for weather
- Decubiti (bedsores)
- Skin rashes
- Dehydration, evidenced by low urinary output, dry fragile skin, dry sore mouth, apathy, lack of energy, and mental confusion
- Untreated medical or mental conditions including infections, soiled bandages, and unattended fractures
- Absence of needed dentures, eyeglasses, hearing aids, walkers, wheelchairs, braces, or commodes
- Exacerbation of chronic diseases despite a care plan
- Worsening dementia
Behavioral indicators
Observed in the caregiver/abuser
- Expresses anger, frustration, or exhaustion
- Isolates the elder from the outside world, friends, or relatives
- Obviously lacks care giving skills
- Is unreasonably critical and/or dissatisfied with social and health care providers and changes providers frequently
- Refuses to apply for economic aid or services for the elder and resists outside help
Observed in the victim
- Exhibits emotional distress such as crying, depression, or despair
- Has nightmares or difficulty sleeping
- Has had a sudden loss of appetite that is unrelated to a medical condition
- Is confused and disoriented (this may be the result of malnutrition)
- Is emotionally numb, withdrawn, or detached
- Exhibits regressive behavior
- Exhibits self-destructive behavior
- Exhibits fear toward the caregiver
Expresses unrealistic expectations about their care (e.g. claiming that their care is adequate when it is not or insisting that the situation will improve)
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Information obtained from National Institute of Health
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