A decade ago, investigators substantiated 159 elder abuse cases
reported to the Pennsylvania Department of Health. Last year, the number
was 1,018, more than a six-fold increase.
The number of abuse reports is up, too. More than 4,200 suspected
cases were reported in 2017, a nearly 45 percent rise since 2008.
But agency regulations that shield caregivers from providing even basic information to the public
mean little is known about the kind of elder abuse that is prevalent,
who is reporting it and what type is more likely to be substantiated.
State officials were at a loss to explain the surge in reports.
"The Wolf administration and the department are committed to ensuring
safety for seniors, which includes residents of nursing homes," Nate
Wardle, a Health Department spokesman, said in an email. "There is no
way of knowing what has caused the increase in reported abuse cases over
the last 10 years."
Advocates, however, saw a silver lining.
Diane Menio, executive director of the Center for Advocacy for the
Rights and Interests of the Elderly, or CARIE, credited greater
awareness for the nearly 60 percent increase in reporting from 2,689 in
2016 to 4,236 last year.
"It's in the news; people are watching and seeing they can make complaints," Menio said.
That wasn't always the case. The Health Department had halted
anonymous complaints - even though federal law required the department
accept them - for nearly three years. Since reinstituting anonymous
complaints in 2015, reporting has steadily climbed.
Still, elder abuse is widely believed to be underreported.
An oft-referenced study out of Boston by the National Research
Council touted by advocates as evidence of underreporting estimated only
1 in 14 incidents of elder abuse is reported, and even fewer for
financial exploitation, 1 in every 25.
Even though Menio and others - including an industry association and
lawmakers - interpreted the increased reporting as a good sign, she also
expressed concern that the percentage of substantiated abuse cases -
while increasing - remains stubbornly low, only 1 in 4.
"As ombudsmen we struggle with this, that things aren't getting
substantiated," Menio said. "It's my sense that they don't get reported
unless it's pretty serious."
And what frustrates Menio is that Health Department investigators, she said, do not trust CARIE's ombudsman.
When conducting a performance review released two years ago, state
Auditor General Eugene A. DePasquale found staffing cuts and revised
policies had negatively impacted the agency's ability to prioritize and
respond to complaints.
Full Article & Source:
Elder abuse reports, substantiations up in Pennsylvania
1 comment:
I don't put stock in these figures at all. So, substantiations are up? Is that supposed to tell us that the Department of Health is doing a better job? I don't think they are because they dismiss too many complaints, always have. They are short staffed, but that's not an excuse for them. We're talking lives here.
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