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Elder Abuse

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Title: Elder Abuse


1
Elder Abuse Prevalence, Identification,
Response and Intervention.. Beyond the Basics
  • Judith Wahl
  • Advocacy Centre for the Elderly
  • wahlj_at_lao.on.ca

2
About our Presenter
  • Judith Wahl, Barrister and Solicitor, has been
    the Executive Director and Senior Lawyer at the
    Advocacy Centre for the Elderly (ACE) since 1984.
    ACE is a community legal service for low income
    seniors that focuses on legal issues that have a
    greater impact on the older population.
  • Judith has organized and taught numerous public
    legal education programmes to social workers,
    health practitioners, and other social service
    providers on legal issues that arise in their day
    to day work with seniors, including Advance Care
    Planning - Physicians Training Ontario College
    of Family Physicians and Alzheimer Society of
    Ontario Gerontology Programme at McMaster
    University, Faculty of Social Sciences the
    Diversity Training Course at C.O. Bick Police
    College as well as Continuing Legal Education
    Programmes for the Law Society of Upper Canada,
    Ontario Bar Association, the former Canadian Bar
    Association Ontario, and the Canadian Bar
    Association National.

3
Advocacy Centre for The Elderly
  • 2 Carlton Street, Suite 701Toronto, OntarioM5B
    1J3
  • Tel - 416-598-2656
  • Fax - 416-598-7924
  • Email wahlj_at_lao.on.ca
  • Website NEW www.acelaw.ca

4
Overview
  • What is Elder Abuse Lesson 1 The Literature
    isnt always Exactly Right
  • Who is being Victimized Lesson 2 This is a
    community Problem and not just that of
    vulnerable persons
  • Why People Dont Seek Help Lesson 3 the
    Systems SAY that help is there but the Practice
    doesnt always match the Ads

5
Overview
  • Responses to Abuse Lesson 4 How Ageism impacts
    on approaches to addressing Elder Abuse
  • Responses to Elder Abuse- Lesson 5 What do
    SENIORS and ALL SERVICE PROVIDERS and OUR
    COMMUNITY need to know to be able to prevent, and
    respond to abuse
  • Traditional Responses to Address Abuse Lesson
    5 Are we doing things that make it LOOK like
    there is a Response when the way we respond
    doesnt work in practice? Possible Better
    Practices

6
What is Elder Abuse ?
  • What is elder abuse?
  • What do you think is elder abuse?
  • Do you think that the seniors in your community
    may have some different perspectives on this? If
    yes, why?

7
Abuse of Older AdultsWhat is it?
  • The mistreatment of an older person by someone
    they should be able to rely upon - a spouse, a
    child, another family member, a friend or a paid
    caregiver
  • Any harm done to an older person by a person in a
    position of trust or authority
  • any action or deliberate inaction by a person in
    a position of trust which causes harm to an older
    adult

8
Abuse of an Older AdultWhat is it?
  • Many definitions - differs between
    professions/individuals
  • We may assume that we are talking about the same
    thing but arent
  • ultimately the definition debate is not that
    important as its the steps we take to prevent
    abuse and the response to abuse that is taken
    that is key

9
Abuse of Older AdultsWhat is it?
  • Not just criminal behaviours
  • Not just civil matters
  • Doesnt happen only to vulnerable adults
  • The Complexity of the issue reflects the need for
    a variety of responses

10
Abuse of an Older AdultWhat is it?
  • Common theme in many definitions is abuse of
    power hence the emphasis on the relationship
    between perpetrator and victim
  • relationships are abusive when a person uses
    various tactics to maintain power and control
    over a person

11
Abuse of Power - What is it?
12
Abuse of Power- What is it?
13
Types of Abuse for which Seniors have contacted
ACE for assistance
  • Most common inquiry by seniors to ACE concerns
    loss of the seniors authority/ when others may
    decide for the senior and when does he or she
    have the right to make decision for him or
    herself?
  • Also systemic abuse when systems assume that
    seniors do not have rights , usually on the basis
    of wrong assumptions

14
Examples of Situations that can be called abuse
that ACE has assisted Seniors with
  • Title and Mortgage Fraud
  • Recovered title to Elderly woman's home where Son
    and daughter in law changed title to property
    using POA
  • Mortgage-fraud case where ACEs client who had
    some cognitive impairment conveyed title to her
    home-renovation contractor, who then mortgaged
    her home three times to the extent of 450,000,
    with the mortgage proceeds having gone to the
    contractor.
  • Set aside a Writ of Possession and successfully
    defended two mortgage actions that threatened
    eviction of an elderly widow whose son, grandson
    and her grandsons common-law spouse conspired to
    defraud her of title and steal mortgage proceeds
    using a forged power of attorney
  • Successfully defended a mortgage action brought
    against a client whose daughter, while ACEs
    client lived in social housing, fraudulently
    placed ACEs client on title to the daughters
    home and refinanced it in ACEs clients name,
    before defaulting on the mortgages leaving ACEs
    client responsible for payment of the mortgage
    debt.

15
Examples of Situations that can be called abuse
that ACE has assisted Seniors with
  • Civil Action for Restitution - Recovered 28,000
    for an older woman with a developmental
    disability who had been sold 14 different
    insurance policies over a 30 year period that
    were of little or no value to her. The Insurance
    company was specifically informed that the woman
    had a developmental disability of a nature that
    she was not capable to contract, but they
    continued to sell additional policies to her.
    Court action was commenced for restitution and
    punitive damages. The action was settled for
    28,000 which represented the return of all
    premiums paid, plus interest, costs, and punitive
    damages. The funds are now being used to allow
    this woman to have a private room in a long term
    care home in which she now resides.

16
Examples of Situations that can be called abuse
that ACE has assisted Seniors with
  • Duty of an Executor - Recovered a 30,000
    testamentary trust left to ACEs elderly disabled
    client from his mothers estate, administered by
    his sister who had refused to account or turn
    over any part of the trust proceeds despite the
    intervention of two privately-retained solicitors
  • Civil action to recover Debt- Obtained ongoing
    monthly payments of 1,500/month on a 70,000
    debt owed to ACEs elderly widowed client by her
    former neighbour, a school teacher, who had
    previously refused to make payment on her debt

17
Abuse Case Examples Contd
  • Professional Misconduct
  • Lawyer- Complaint to Law Society- proceedings
    before Discipline Committee brought against a
    cognitivelyimpaired clients former solicitor,
    who charged her 3,000 to prepare a simple will
    and power of attorneys that were never signed,
    and whom refused to divulge the content of her
    file.  A finding of professional misconduct was
    made in September 2008, with disposition on
    penalty to follow.
  • Physician- Obtained a decision from the Health
    Professions Appeal and Review Board that
    treatment without consent by a hospital physician
    formed professional misconduct for which the
    physician was sanctioned

18
Abuse Case Examples Contd
  • Gaps in Legislation - Obtained a decision from
    the Ministry of Health and Long Term Care to have
    the Complex Continuing Care rate be used to
    determine the charges for a 56 year old man who
    was a resident in a long term care home. Had the
    Long term care rates been applied to him, his
    wife and son living in the community, who were
    not eligible for welfare and had only limited
    employment income, would have been forced into
    poverty. ACE continues to advocate with the
    Ministry of Health and Long Term Care to address
    this problem of charges for long term care in the
    regulations to the new Long Term Care Homes
    legislation as this problem impacts all families
    in which one spouse, although young (under 65)
    must seek admission to a long term care home due
    to a chronic illness that cannot be managed in
    their own home. Also affects situations where one
    spouse over 65 is a resident in a LTC home and
    spouse in the community is under 65 and a
    dependent on the resident.

19
Abuse Case Examples Contd
  • Problems in the Health System and Systemic Abuse
    - Successfully defended a large number of clients
    who could not return to their own homes from
    hospital but needed admission to long term care
    homes who had been threatened with large per diem
    charges by hospitals when the clients exercised
    their legal rights in respect to admission to
    long term care homes that met their needs. ACE
    has also undertaken systemic advocacy with the
    Ministry of Health and Long Term Care to address
    this issue because of the high volume of cases of
    this type.

20
Abuse Case Examples Contd
  • Problems in the Health System
  • Successfully advocated for a client to get
    admission to a long term care home of her choice
    when the various parties involved in her
    discharge at the hospital and at the Community
    Care Access Centre had failed to follow the
    required process and Ministry policy in respect
    to admission
  • Assisted a man with a chronic degenerative
    disorder who could not live independently to get
    admission to a long term care home. Although he
    needed long term care, he had been refused
    admission by all the long term care homes to
    which he had applied. He also could not get
    admitted to a hospital because he did not have
    high enough care needs to be eligible as a
    complex continuing care patient. ACE staff
    advocated with the Community Care Access Centre
    and with the Ministry of Health and Long Term
    Care to get admission into a long term care home.
    This advocacy took place over nine months, This
    case illustrates the need for a formal process
    and a patients right to a review of refusals of
    admission by long term care homes

21
Legal Definitions in Criminal Code - Physical
Abuse
  • Assault s 265
  • Assault with a weapon or causing bodily harm s.
    267
  • Forcible Confinement ss 279(1)

22
Sexual Abuse, Neglect, Mental Abuse
  • Sexual Assault s.271
  • Breach of Duty to Provide Necessaries s.215
  • Intimidation s.423
  • Uttering threats s.264.1.

23
Financial Abuse
  • Theft s.322
  • Theft by a Person Holding a Power of Attorney
    s.331
  • Fraud s.380
  • Extortion s.346
  • Stopping Mail With Intent s.345
  • Forgery s.366

24
Definitions of Abuse
  • Doesnt need to be labelled elder abuse to be
    that
  • Abuse occurs in systems when the law is not
    followed
  • Abuse occurs when misinformation about rights /
    responsibilities is given out
  • Services may contribute to abuse when they give
    authority to Attorneys in POAs or to SDMs that
    they dont have

25
Definitions of Abuse
  • Definition of Abuse in long term care settings -
    different perspectives on what is good care
  • - different perspectives because it is a work
    place for the service providers but the home of
    the residents
  • - similar issues arise in respect to other
    services where there may be a disconnect in
    what the users and providers think of as abuse

26
Who are the victims of abuse?
  • Who do you see that you think are victims of
    abuse?
  • Why do you think they are victims of abuse?
  • Have you talked to the person you think is being
    abused about what you think is happening to them?

27
Profiles of Victims and AbusersWhat the
Literature Says
VICTIMS may
ABUSERS may
  • Be widowed or living alone
  • Be socially isolated
  • Be under the control or influence of the abuser
  • Have some degree of physical impairment or
    mental incapacity
  • Be physically frail, but mentally capable
  • Have substance abuse problems
  • Have a history of mental illness or emotional
    problems
  • Be dependent on the older person for assistance
  • Be resentful of caregiving role
  • May not have visible dysfunctional traits

28
Profile of Victims and Abusers
  • Is the Literature up to date?
  • Victims may ALSO be very able people and not the
    traditionally vulnerable person
  • Abusers may seem very helpful and concerned for
    the victim
  • Victims may become victims because they see the
    abuser as being helpful and themselves as needing
    help or companionship or.
  • Watch out for your own stereotyping
  • Dont let a stereotype approach to abuse direct
    how you/your community responds

29
Risk factors for abuse
  • Family history of abuse
  • Physical frailty
  • Cognitive status
  • Isolation
  • Finances
  • But Also Lack of Knowledge of Rights -
    Dependency on Systems that dont know the
    rights of the seniors or have different
    perspective on what the rights of the senior are

30
Data on Prevalence
  • Depends on how you define it and how the data
    makers define it/ perceive it/ etc
  • Seems to be no current comprehensive Canadian
    research on prevalence- Stats Canada discussing
    doing such a study

31
Europe Simon Biggs et al.
  • Germany- 1 in 4 subjects age 60 report incidents
    of verbal aggression by family and household
    members
  • 1.3 older men and 1.6 older women report
    physical violence
  • -prevalence of physical and psychological abuse
    twice as high for 40-59 than plus 60
  • UK- any mistreatment 2.6 neglect 1.1,
    financial .7 psychological .4 Physical .4
  • Nordic countries- recent concern with over
    medication , restraint, and understaffing in care

32
What do you do/ is possible for you to do when
you see abuse?
  • What do you do/ can do if you think abuse is
    happening?
  • What are the challenges for you in responding?
  • What are the challenges for the victim in doing
    something?

33
The Abuse Dynamic
  • Abuse of older adults more parallel to domestic
    spousal abuse than child abuse
  • a different dynamic than spouse abuse because
    abuser may be own child
  • you can divorce your spouse but not your child
  • Older adults are ADULTS not children, even if
    they lack mental capacity for some purposes

34
Why Seniors Fail to Seek Assistance
  • Shame, guilt, fear of reprisal
  • fear of police and court system or belief that
    police cant help
  • fear of not being believed
  • dont realize they are being abused
  • dont know their rights in a system
  • cannot see an alternative to the situation
  • are not aware of support services that could help
  • fear of being placed in an institution

35
Why Service Providers Fail to Talk to the Senior
or to Contact Police or Help Directly
  • Reluctance of raising the issue with the senior
  • Belief that if they talk to the senior the senior
    will refuse help
  • Belief that information they have is confidential
    to them alone
  • Failure to recognize abuse as a crime
  • Fear of the abuser
  • Reluctance to be a witness
  • Lack of understanding of the Seniors rights in a
    system

36
Would you respond differently to a younger woman
that was being abused within her family than to a
senior that is being abused within his or her
family?
  • And why?

37
AGEISM
  • The prejudicial stereotyping discrimination
    against older people
  • It is important to examine whether you carry with
    you ageist attitudes in how you look at abuse and
    respond to abuse

38
AGEISM
  • Diminishing the self worth of senior
  • Assumptions, e.g. physical frailty vs mental
    frailty, treating senior like a child, removing
    decision making process
  • Ignoring a seniors wishes
  • Brush offs
  • Assumptions about the Seniors rights in the
    system eg Hospital Discharge or Rights within a
    Retirement Home or Personal Care home

39
Capacity and Substitute Decision-Making
  • Most older adults are capable of making their own
    decisions
  • Capacity can change from decision to decision,
    and from time to time
  • There is not a single test that determines
    capacity for all times and all purposes
  • Watch out for a Best Interests Test a Capable
    person has the right to Risk

40
Important Tips on Capacity Issues
  • Do not automatically assume that frail elderly
    people are incapable
  • Speak with the older person, not around him/her
  • Help to empower the older person
  • DONT assume that the Attorney in a POA has power
    just because he or she is named in a POA
  • Understand when the attorney in a POA HAS power
    and what power they have and when they dont have
    power
  • Understand the Authorities ( or lack thereof of
    an SDM)
  • Recognize potential conflicts of interest
    opportunities for elder abuse by a substitute
    decision-maker

41
Best Interests vs. the Seniors Right to Decide
  • Although people say that they believe any abuse
    response should be from the point of view of the
    older adult, when the time comes when the
    service provider faces the tough situation
    best interests rather than support may occur
    someone may decide FOR the senior despite the
    fact that the senior is mentally capable someone
    else may assume that they know better

42
Lets talk about possible response to elder abuse
  • What do we need to know in order to respond and
    help people or help people get help?
  • What do you think you dont know about and what
    to know more about?
  • Where do you get that info?

43
Things to Think About in Creating Options to
Respond
  • Need to understand what victims WANT and NEED as
    opposed to what Service Providers and Others Want
    and Need
  • Need to Understand why people REFUSE help

44
Needs of Victims (1)
  • 1. To Stop the Abuse
  • 2. Safety, Shelter
  • 3. Financial Resources
  • 4. Home Support Services/Housing Alternatives

45
Needs of Victims (2)
  • 5. Emotional Support, Counselling, Links to the
    Community
  • 6. Information on the Criminal Justice System
    and on Other Legal Rights/Remedies

46
What do YOU think you need to know more about?
  • Authority of people for their own decision making
    and what that means
  • Services and systems that are in your community
    that are not necessarily labelled as elder abuse
    services
  • Duties and powers of attorneys in POAs and when
    the attorney has that power and authority
  • Powers and authorities and duties of other SDMs
    and when they have that authority
  • Privacy and how that impacts on what you do and
    how you help
  • How to gain access to people that may be victims
    of abuse
  • How to talk to people about possible abuse

47
Other specific response to Elder Abuse
  • There is often a stereotyped response form people
    when they talk about elder abuse
  • We see repeated calls for mandatory reporting
    legislation or services like Elder abuse hotlines
    . But .when people ask for these response do
    they understand how these ACTUALLY work and NOT
    WORK ??

48
Other Responses to Elder Abuse -- The Usual
Responses But..
  • Reporting legislation in the Community does this
    work and would it help? Who does it help? What
    are the limitations of such a system? Is it a
    best practice or is something else better?
  • Reporting legislation in Health Care Facilities
    (Long term care homes). Why is that there and
    does it work and who and what does it depend on?

49
The Usual Responses But..
  • Hotlines How do these work? What are their
    limitations? Who do they help? What is necessary
    for these to be effective?
  • Protocols- What are these and how do they work
    and what are their limitations and how do you
    limit the limitations
  • Education to Raise Awareness what works, what
    doesnt, what are some of the challenges.
  • Community Consultation Teams - do these work,
    and what about privacy, and what are their
    limitations
  • What else????

50
And What About?
  • Other Legislative Changes ie Retirement Homes and
    Home care?
  • Training and better understanding about the law,
    policies and practices about mental capacity,
    decision making authority, health consent,
    advance care planning, privacy and
  • Legal Services for Older Adults?
  • Other Supportive Community Resources and
    Community Networking ? Provincial and local
    resources?
  • Public intervention by the Public Guardian and
    Trustee in respect to Persons that are Incapable
    and at Risk of Serious Harm?

51
Other Systemic Abuses
  • Inappropriate hospital discharge
  • Use of advance directives/ level of care forms
    instead of consent
  • Requiring seniors to do things that are not
    requirements in the law and not necessarily the
    best for the senior but are done for
    institutional convenience or for other reasons
    that benefit someone other than the older adult
  • HOW do we address / respond to these issues?

52
Main Lesson Learned through our work at ACE
  • TALK TO THE SENIOR!!!!!!!
  • Most people say that they want to get the message
    out any response will be senior focused and that
    if at all possible with the consent and at the
    direction of the senior BUT much lip service is
    given to this in practice, often unintentionally
    sometimes because they dont have time, or
    because

53
Specific Service Responses
  • When services say that they are responding is
    that the case?
  • How many seniors services use voicemail to
    answer the phone? Does this really help the older
    adult get access?
  • How many services set up protocols but then dont
    allocate time to learn them, or integrate them
    into the service, or use them to give access? Or
    are the protocols used to limit access?
  • How many services set up rules or eligibility
    requirements that do not necessarily reflect the
    governing law?

54
Main Lesson Learned through our work at ACE
  • Many services SAY that they are senior focused
    but arent in practice
  • Systemic abuse is very difficult to address as it
    requires major policy change in some cases
  • With the growing population of seniors these
    changes better start or there will be significant
    problems in our communities across Canada

55
Looking Beyond the Usual
  • Is it possible to look beyond the usual ?
  • Will the responses work in practice?
  • Do the responses actually meet the seniors
    needs?
  • How do we go beyond saying that we are doing
    things and move into actually making progress and
    helping in a way that seniors find meaningful and
    not just the service providers and politicians
    find meaningful?

56
Something to Think About
  • What can YOU do
  • To increase awareness about abuse of older
    adults?
  • To help prevent abuse ?
  • To support those services that are working with
    seniors to prevent abuse and to respond to abuse?
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