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“It’s wildly underreported,” said Jean Callahan, executive director of Hunter College’s Brookings Center for Healthy Aging. “People in nursing homes are generally less capable than those out in the communities of speaking up for themselves.”
Federal officials and researchers are faced with collecting data from the nation’s disparate local and state law enforcement agencies, prosecutors and social service agencies.
That leaves them grabbing for numbers based on phone surveys and highly variable sources of data.
Full Article and Source:
Abuse May Be Common But Often Hard to Quantify
3 comments:
Our government is supposed to be responsible for the welfare of its citizens. Where are they in this?
I think what this report is overlooking is that people have developed an apathy about reporting because when one files a report, it's generally dismissed. The word is out.
Phone surveys? They're depending on phone surveys? Geez. No wonder....
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