Researcher Sarah Williams of Scripps College |
It’s a commonly-seen phenomenon: An aging relative or friend becomes slower at processing bills and calculating tips, or finds it increasingly difficult to decipher a medical bill; arithmetic errors in the checkbook register make it all the harder to balance the account at the end of the month.
This is an expected part of aging, but such difficulties can also be warning signs of a financial competence decline that makes seniors more vulnerable to abuse by caregivers, scam artists or family members granted control of an elder’s finances.
While the term “abuse” may conjure up visions of physical injury or neglect, the most common form of elder abuse is financial exploitation, according to Naomi Karp, a senior policy analyst for the U.S. Consumer Financial Protection Bureau’s Office for Older Americans.
Karp was part of a financial exploitation panel discussion last week at the Gerontological Society of America’s 2014 Annual Scientific Meeting in Washington, D.C.
Elder financial exploitation is defined as “illegal or improper use of an older adult’s funds, property or assets” by any type of perpetrator, from close a relative to a repair contractor to a telephone swindler. It is a growing but underreported crime. Karp cited recent estimates that 5 percent of community-dwelling seniors have been victims — but that for every reported financial abuse incident, about 43 cases go unreported.
Daniel Marson, a professor of neurology at the University of Alabama-Birmingham School of Medicine, listed warning signs to watch for in aging adults, including increased slowness in processing bills, missing key details (for instance, a warning that payment is overdue), increased trouble with financial arithmetic, and decreased understanding of financial concepts such as medical insurance deductibles.
The ranks of older adults are expected to swell nationwide in the coming decades as the large Baby Boomer generation reaches their 60s and 70s. Here in Boston, following a decline between 1990 and 2000, the older adult population has been on the rise. From 2000 to 2020, Boston will see a 32.1 percent increase in the number of residents 60 and older, and a 21.3 percent rise in those 65 or older, according to projections from the Massachusetts Executive Office of Elder Affairs. Older adults are the fastest growing population segment worldwide and locally.
With this increase, more and more relatives or caregivers may be thrust into a “financial caregiver” role. For some, this may be an easy role that draws on natural abilities or money management experience. Others will lack the skills, confidence or time to do the job well. And some will use the role to rob elders of their life savings.
In Boston, the nonprofit Ethos in Jamaica Plain functions as the state Elder Protective Services agency for Greater Boston in collaboration with Central Boston Elder Services and Boston Senior Home Care.
Sandy Hovey, Ethos’ director of elder protective services, said the agency receives 160 to 200 reports of elder abuse monthly, many of which involve an elder victimized by a financial scam or taken advantage of by a family member.
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Elder financial abuse a growing problem as population ages
4 comments:
Naomi Karp needs to investigate elder financial abuse by the Virginia public guardianship programs she helped set up and evaluate years ago.
Financial abuse such as 13 bounced checks in one case in one month by Catholic Charities of Eastern Virginia. Financial abuse such as attempts to cheat the elderly out of the attorney they are guaranteed by law, blatant violation of a court order, and illegal obstructionism to prevent the court from learning the truth about the elderly person's living circumstances in a horrific Scott Schuett facility. (For the appalling details, please google "Scott Schuett.")
Financial abuse and exploitation such as the $41,000 plus bill issued by the guardian ad litem "for" Jenny Hatch, who had several massive conflicts of interest and who worked tirelessly, not for her "client," but for the petitioners, for the Hampton-Newport News Community Services Board (on which she previously served), and for the public guardianship program, Jewish Family Service of Tidewater.
Financial abuse such as permitting these public guardianship programs and the tiny handful of dishonest, corrupt attorneys associated with these public guardianship programs to hand-pick the guardian ad litem "for" the incapacitated person, in direct violation of the law of the Commonwealth of Virginia and the accountability and oversight measures set up by Dr. Pam Teaster and evaluated by Naomi Karp years ago.
How about it, Ms. Karp? Are you going to continue to attend meaningless conferences and issue hand-wringing edicts about how the world should be?
Or are you going to use the authority of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau to DO SOMETHING and PUT A STOP to this financial abuse, exploitation, fraud, and neglect of the elderly? Even if it means exposing the truth about your old buddies?
And they're working hard to pin most of the elder financial abuse on family so the door is open for guardianship.
I agree Anonymous. Naomi Karp is in prime position to fix this mess and it's time for her to step up to the plate and declare she's going to do her best to do just that, instead of yet another study. We don't need studies anymore. We need action.
I agree with stand up NO MORE studies! There is more financial abuse by professional guardians than family members.
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