preview

Family Values Shape The Way People Are Today

Good Essays

Family values shape the way people are today. The meaning of family could vary depending on our background, whether blood related, marriage, or just emotionally attached, it’s used out of a form of love. Values are the things we strongly believe in. Forms of values could be culture, race, or ethnicity. Almost everyone lives up to the saying “family first.” Putting our family first could mean putting things to the side for a family night, cooking for your family, or taking family trips. Others could be finding the right care or making sure our family is financially stabled. However, in our society today we lack some of these values.
Eventually people age, the older people get the more care and love they need. Caring for the elderly citizens …show more content…

Some will never receive a visit while they’re living and some will become so sick they’ll start losing memory.
Today we see headlines saying elderlies being mistreated in nursing homes. 1 out of 3 nursing home has a report of abuse and in 1996, approximately 450,000 adults over the age of 60 were abused and/or neglected in domestic settings. ABC news reports that common problems include untreated bedsores, inadequate medical care, malnutrition, dehydration, preventable accidents and inadequate sanitation and hygiene. Although these are just a few incidents, more do occur. ABC News also reports documents instances of residents being punched, slapped, choked or kicked by staff members or other residents, causing injury such as fractured bones or lacerations. These common incidents occur throughout many nursing homes. Abuse to an elderly person can cause them to have psychological abuse. Psychological abuse is when a caregiver cause emotional pain or stress to a patient. Elders who experienced abuse, even modest abuse, have a 300% higher risk of death when compared to those who had not been abused.
In 2006, 89-year-old Albert Wagner was sexually abuse by a nursing home worker at Mid-Coast Senior Health Center in Brunswick, ME. Due to Wagner being legally blind and partially deaf it was hard for him to tell his story to his family members. His granddaughter Kate Marro visited him occasionally when she started to notice a change in

Get Access