It is down founding that cognitive people who are capable to making the right choices in a proper manner can take advantage of elderly individuals. These elderly individuals have gone through hardship to protect their own children and their own children to be verbally and physically abusive to them it is sad. It is crazy family members are capable of elderly abuse because they are unable to protect themselves. This type of abuse kill their moral and desire to live. Elder abuse doesn’t just affect the individuals’ safety but it cause mental illness. I think financial and material exploitation in elderly is one thing that happens more often than society would like to accept. Also, people feeling like their elderly mother or father is a burden
Is it worth putting your loved ones in a nursing home facility? According to Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, “Each year, hundreds of thousands of adults over the age of 60 are abused, neglected, or financially exploited.” Family members of an elderly person might assume that because they are paying such a large amount of money for assistance and a room in the facility, that they’re getting the best treatment and care for their relative. Although one might believe their loved ones would be better off in a nursing home, they might be putting them at a greater risk of abuse due to understaffing, lack of training within the staff, neglect, nurse burnout, and low wages. 2,150,000 cases
Do you have a loved one in a nursing home? Imagine if your grandma, grandpa, aunt, uncle, mom, dad or other loved one was being abused. How would this make you feel? Abuse does not necessarily mean physical abuse (hitting, scratching, pulling hair, etc.). Other types of abuse include sexual, neglect, exploitation, emotional, abandonment, and self-neglect.
The perpetrators also portray several risk factors and these include circumstances that put them at the likelihood of abusing the elderly. The most common risk factors in this case are mental illness such as depression and anxiety as this triggers verbal and physical abuse; substance misuse and this has been linked with physical, emotional, sexual, financial and psychological abuse; and abuser dependency as their level of dependence threatens the well-being of the adult.
Scheidet, R.A. (2003). Improving Student Achievement by Infusing a Web-Based Curriculum into Global History. Journal Of Research on Technology in Education. International Society for Technology in Education, 36(1), 77-94. Retrieved from: Ashford University Library
Elder abuse is of growing concern in today’s society; it is the single most unreported cause of abuse. The thesis of this paper is to describe elder abuse, look at why it is becoming such a problem and what is being done to correct it. According to World Health Organization it is estimated that 80 percent of elder abuse is unreported (Daly, Schmeidel & Jogerst, 2012). Elder abuse is a problem not only just in the health care setting but community wide. Patience and having the time to care for the elderly population is becoming more and more of a struggle in that nurses are being continuously bombarded with a larger patient load and a lack of help. In an article by Rosen (2014), it is stated that five
It is known that dissertation research must contribute to theory. However, for applied research the study does not have to prove why one thing causes the other. In addition, the research topic does not have to generate new theory or ideas it can be build on existing literature. Therefore, the purpose of this paper is to examine recent literature regarding elder abuse in nursing homes in order, to investigate mediating, moderating, or independent variables in an attempt to contribute to theory.
“Evidence suggests that one in 10 older adults experiences some form of elder abuse, but only one in 25 cases is reported to social services agencies” (Dong, 2012, p. 2151). Elder mistreatment can occur in a variety of settings including domestic and assisted living. Elder abuse includes psychological, physical, and sexual abuse; neglect to include both caregiver and self-neglect; and financial exploitation. With the vast explosion of the aging population in today’s society elder abuse can no longer loom in the shadows.
As our population ages there are more individuals who are relying on the assistance and the care from others in order to perform tasks throughout their day. With this reliance on other individual’s assistance the elderly population is at an increased rate of experiencing a form of abuse from their caregiver. Children or a spouse are often found to be the abuser for elderly individuals who are still living in the community setting (DeLiema, Navarro, Enguidanos, &Wilber, 2015). This is becoming a growing concern, as it is estimated that around 10% of the United States elderly population is currently or has experiences at least one form of abuse. The forms of abuse that can occur include physical, sexual, psychological or emotional, financial
Elder abuse can be defined as the infliction of injury by a caregiver in an unreasonable manner; may involve intimidation, confinement or punishment that results in mental anguish/mental illness, physical pain/harm. Physical abuse includes striking an elder with objects, slapping him/her, pushing him/her and hitting him/her. Use of physical restraints and chemical
This book has two focuses. The first part was about present general information about elder abuse and neglect. The authors start their book by defining elder abuse and descripting senior adults as a vulnerable population. They focus on identifying the five factors of elder abuse by reviewing some studies of elder abuse and neglect. According to sociological, psychological, and gerontological literature on family relations, the authors explain some reasons of occurring this issue such as intra-individual dynamics, intergenerational, dependency and exchange relations between abusing and abused persons, external stress, and social isolation. The second part of the book focuses on victims and the abuse situation itself. Through comparative analyses,
McKie, David. (2007). Beaten down: Fear and violence in Canada's nursing homes. Retrieved May 1, 2009.
There are current studies which suggest that financial exploitation of older adult’s is a common form of elder abuse. This can lead to further elder abuse including physical, and emotional abuse, exploitation, neglect, and abandonment. Perpetrated by the elder’s children,
It is challenging to define elder abuse, as so many forms exist and the extent is not so visible in many cases; also, the consequences and the medical bills of the physical abuse is very expensive. Elder abuse does not only come in the form of emotional or physical violence but also from neglect and failure to care for the elderly.
The first article “What is Elder Abuse?” explains what elder abuse is, who are the victims, and the many different types of abuse that can take place. The article helps define elder abuse in a way that describes how, “as elders become more physically frail, they’re less able to stand up to bullying and or fight back if attacked” (Robinson, de Benedictis, Ph.D., and Segal, Ph.D., 2011). For this reason, many caregivers or family
The World Health Organization (2014) defines elder abuse as, “a single, or repeated act, or lack of appropriate action, occurring within any relationship where there is an expectation of trust which causes harm or distress to an older person” (World Health Organization, 2014). Elder abuse violates various ethical principles. First, the abuse disregards the individual’s autonomy. He or she is not choosing whether or not to be injured (Rueckert-Harman