{"id":224387,"date":"2016-01-15T00:00:00","date_gmt":"2016-01-14T14:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.relationships.org.au\/jan-2016-elder-abuse\/"},"modified":"2023-07-07T16:51:06","modified_gmt":"2023-07-07T06:51:06","slug":"jan-2016-elder-abuse","status":"publish","type":"document","link":"https:\/\/www.relationships.org.au\/document\/jan-2016-elder-abuse\/","title":{"rendered":"Elder abuse"},"content":{"rendered":"
Elder abuse is any act within a relationship of trust that results in harm to an older person. The abuse may be emotional, psychological, financial, physical, sexual, or neglect. According to the World Health Organization, elder abuse is a violation of human rights and a significant cause of illness, injury, loss of productivity, isolation and despair. <\/p>\n
Elder abuse is any act within a relationship of trust that results in harm to an older person.\u00a0 The abuse may be emotional, psychological, financial, physical, sexual, or neglect.\u00a0 According to the World Health Organization, elder abuse is a violation of human rights and a significant cause of illness, injury, loss of productivity, isolation and despair.<\/p>\n
Many people do not discuss their concerns with others because of feelings of shame, fear of retaliation or because the perpetrator may by a family member.\u00a0 Some people may not realise that they are experiencing abuse, or feel that somehow it is their fault.<\/p>\n
Elder abuse is one part of a spectrum of violence that occurs when there are unequal power relationships. Family violence research tells us that where imbalances of power occur in relationships there is a risk of abuse occurring from the dominant person or persons. \u00a0These power differences have been interpreted, particularly in relation to family violence, as the result of living in a patriarchal or male orientated society where males and male values dominate.\u00a0 While in all age groups, the majority of those being abused are female and the abusers are mainly male, this gendered view of violence and abuse becomes blurred somewhat when the abuse occurs in older populations.<\/p>\n
In January 2016 Relationships Australia asked visitors to our website a few questions about their experience and understanding of elder abuse in the monthly online two minute survey.<\/p>\n
More than 1650 people responded to the Relationships Australia online survey in December.\u00a0 More than four-fifths of survey respondents (81%) identified as female.<\/p>\n
As was the case for last month\u2019s survey, more females than males responded in every age group (figure 1).\u00a0 More than ninety-five per cent (97%) of survey respondents were aged between 20\u201159 years, with the highest number of responses collected for women aged between 30-39 years (inclusive).<\/p>\n
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The demographic profile of survey respondents remains consistent with our experience of the people that would be accessing the Relationships Australia website.<\/p>\n
Survey respondents were asked whether they had concerns about an older person who may be experiencing elder abuse (figure 2).\u00a0 Just under one-third (30%) of survey respondents reported concerns about an elderly friend or relative experienceing elder abuse, with women more likely to report concerns than men.<\/p>\n
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Just under seventy per cent (67%) of survey respondents identified greed and a sense of entitlement as a contributing factor to elder abuse.\u00a0 The next most common factors included the poor physical and mental health of older people (49%) and abusers (43%), and the financial problems of the abuser (42%).<\/p>\n
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Survey respondents reported that they thought the most likely perpetrators of elder abuse were the partners or spouses of the older person, their sons or daughters.\u00a0 Female survey respondents were more likely to report sons (25% compared with 19%) as the most likely perpetrators of elder abuse, while men were more likely to report that they thought partners (25%\u00a0compared with 22%) or daughters (17% compared with 10%) were the most likely perpetrators of elder abuse (figure 4).\u00a0 The percentages attributed to sons and daughters are significantly lower than the estimated 90 per cent of elder abuse attributed to adult children in the extant research.<\/p>\n
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Very few survey respondents reported that they wouldn\u2019t do anything if they suspected elder abuse (figure\u00a05).\u00a0 Men were more likely than women to indicate they would speak to the abuser (12% compared with 6%), while women were more likely than men to report that they would speak to the older person (25% compared with 21%).\u00a0 Just over forty per cent of men and women survey respondents indicated that they would report their suspicions to the police or a community organisation.<\/p>\n
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http:\/\/www.seniorsrights.org.au\/toolkit\/toolkit\/what-is-elder-abuse\/<\/a><\/p>\n