By Barbara Peters Smith
"I know she steals my silverware, but at least she comes every day."
Terry Fulmer, president of the John A. Hartford Foundation, quoted these words of her former patient in a Grantmakers in Aging
webinar this week, "Making Elder Justice a Reality." The poignant mix
of vulnerability and pragmatism at work here is no doubt familiar to a
lot of elders and their caregivers, and it illustrates the difficulty of
finally doing something meaningful about the complex problem of elder
abuse.
Kathy Greenlee |
Joining her in the talk was Kathy Greenlee, U.S.
assistant secretary for aging and a passionate advocate for raising the
profile of elder abuse. The fact that abuse can be physical, emotional
and financial complicates the work to combat it, Greenlee said.
"When we talk about an estimated 10 percent of
older adults having abuse every year, the number is so large that it
becomes a bit numbing," she said. "We are decades behind other fields,
such as domestic violence and child abuse, and we really need research
in every direction to help us form a response."
Since the passage of the 2010 Elder Justice Act,
in concert with the Affordable Care Act, the ball started rolling slowly
but is picking up speed. Greenlee is working with a coalition of some
12 federal departments and agencies to put together the first federal
"home" for adult protective services.
"It's significant," she said. "At a federal level
we've had an office for child protective services for decades." But for
adults, "we have 50 different approaches. It creates a patchwork across
the country and gives us no real sense of what the national picture
looks like, in terms of data and quality."
Even with better research, it won't be easy. Greenlee cited a new report by the Frameworks Institute that
was designed to answer her question of "why not everybody in the world
is as enraged as I am about elder abuse." The provocative report
highlights the thin line between protection and paternalism:
"When thinking about elder abuse, people assume
that it is up to younger people to make decisions for older people. When
this mode of thinking is active, the public understands older people as
objects to be cared for and protected, rather than as actors with
voices and minds of their own. These understandings not only fuel
ageism but also make it hard for the public to understand how older
people’s integration and participation in the community can help
to prevent elder abuse."
Hospital price check
The march to greater transparency in health care
costs continues: The Florida Hospital Association has unveiled a new
section of its “Mission to Care” website,
with information on hospital prices and quality. The website also
provides context for the cost data and emphasizes that patients should
contact their hospitals, physicians and health plans for accurate
out-of-pocket estimates.
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The goal of elder justice dangles within reach
1 comment:
I think it dangles within reach but reaching it is far off.
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