Case
managers at the Central Ohio Area Agency on Aging arranged for the
78-year-old disabled man to get help bathing, dressing and taking his
medication, but for some reason, he wasn’t receiving consistent
services.
Worried
that the agency was going to put his grandfather in a nursing home, the
grandson moved him to an extended-stay motel and then an unfurnished
apartment.
“We found him sitting in the middle of an empty room with no food, no bed, no extra clothes, no supervision, no nothing,” said Barb Barrett, a Franklin County adult protective-services caseworker. The elderly man, a former pastor with a gift for telling stories, has a host of health issues, including severe arthritis, diabetes and untreated mental illness. He uses a wheelchair to get around and needs assistance with most of his daily-living activities.
In
the old days, the two senior-serving groups might have continued with
their separate investigations, and maybe shared a little information.
But for almost two years, most Ohio counties have referred their most
perplexing cases of suspected elder abuse, neglect or exploitation, such
as this one, to interdisciplinary teams, called I-Teams for short.
To increase and improve adult protective services, the state started requiring counties in September 2015 to create I-Teams with representatives from such fields as fire and EMS, law enforcement, the legal community and social services. The teams meet regularly, often monthly, to discuss difficult cases. To deal with confidentiality concerns, clients’ names are never used.
The
teams are aimed at identifying service gaps and communication
breakdowns, said Kelly Patton, a lawyer and former probate-court
magistrate who serves as chairwoman of Franklin County’s I-Team. The
teams also give members an opportunity to learn about resources and
services in the community.
Essentially, the teams benefit from the backgrounds and training of everyone who weighs in on the cases, she said.
More
than 80 of Ohio’s 88 counties have established I-Teams, said Angela
Terez, a spokeswoman for the Ohio Department of Job and Family Services.
State officials are working with the remaining few to get their teams
going.
“Counties have embraced this charge,” Terez said.
“Most tell us they’re hopeful the teams will improve local prevention
efforts.”
Elder abuse is a serious and growing problem,
especially as the senior population explodes in number and public
resources shrink, experts say.
Approximately 1 in 10
Americans 60 or older has experienced some form of abuse, neglect or
exploitation, according to the National Center on Elder Abuse. And those
figures are probably low; one study estimates that only 1 in 14 cases
is even reported to authorities.
In Ohio, 16,579
reports of abuse, neglect or exploitation were filed in the state’s
fiscal year that ended June 30. That’s a nearly 11 percent increase from
six years ago.
The Central Ohio Area Agency on Aging
created Franklin County’s team in 2011, well before the state mandate,
said Diana Kubovcik, the agency’s client-services director who helped
with its creation.
“These cases aren’t getting any easier, and the teams have really helped us be more creative and efficient,” Kubovcik said.
Lindsay
Drerup, the social-work supervisor for the Franklin County Guardianship
Service Board, said networking in the I-Team has been invaluable. She
said she now has contacts at other agencies who can help her with other
cases.
Created two years ago to fix a glaring problem in
the county’s guardianship system, the board assigns social workers
instead of lawyers to serve as guardians for some of the county’s
most-vulnerable residents. The board’s six caseworkers are helping more
than 180 people who have been declared incompetent.
“The
biggest challenge is recruiting more professionals to help us with the
cases,” said Andrea See, clinical manager of the Senior Options program
at the Central Ohio Area Agency on Aging.
The group, for
example, would love to get more involvement from the county coroner and
prosecutor’s offices as well as probate court and local banks, See
said. It also would like to get more case referrals from the community.
The
I-Teams help change people’s lives for the better, said Sally Smith, a
supervisor with Franklin County’s adult protective services, which is
part of the Office on Aging.
In the case of the
78-year-old man, adult protective services was able to get him into a
nursing home, but not without the grandson trying to sneak him off the
property.
The agency later obtained a restraining order against the
grandson, but not before he threatened to blow up its building. He was
arrested and ordered to stay away from his grandfather.
Through
it all, the elderly man’s condition deteriorated, and he was found to
be incompetent. In early July, a probate judge ruled that the man needed
a guardian, and the Guardianship Service Board has been appointed to
help oversee his care.
It’s not the first time a
guardian has been appointed for him. He had one in another county for
three years after concerns were raised that another daughter was
exploiting him financially.
“He’s safe, doing well and has found new purpose trying to help other residents,” Smith said.
Full Article & Source:
‘I-Teams’ unite agencies to take on toughest cases of elder abuse
2 comments:
These teams need to be educated about guardianship abuse.
I don't believe any of this statement period. Why not interview the grandson and the grandpa let them have their say because is only proven to be lies. I have grand feeling this grandpa adores his grandson and you said the daughter that made the fake complaint most the mother of this grandson trying to take care of his grandpa was proven to be financially abusive in the past right? This grandson from already experiencing Ohios horrific guardianship system was most likely trying to protect him. I would anything to believe in this State as these supposed caring agencies but frankly they all are corrupt period and you didn't stop appointing lawyers as guardians what you do now is actually pay one for the person and one for the State that costs even more money for the innocent people kidnapped by the court. Lets not forget Medicaid is also charged insane fees for these guardians as well. This just sounds like same song and dance in Ohio.
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