The law foolishly requires most elderly people to give permission for their family members to be questioned
A new law
to address elder abuse has reached Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s desk. For the
first time, as required by House Bill 3065, staffers for the state’s
Adult Protective Services will be required to talk to an elderly
person’s entire immediate family when trying to confirm abuse
complaints.
Confirming obvious physical abuse or neglect, under these
conditions, may still be no problem for a visiting caseworker. But when
long-term isolation and emotional abuse — not physical abuse — make up
the core of the abuse complaint, it seems improbable that a cowed and
isolated elder will suddenly cooperate with a visiting stranger from
Adult Protective Services.
The same goes for the APS procedural requirement that an
elder’s isolation or confinement be verbally confirmed by the abused
elder.
What do we still not get about elder abuse — that
traumatic exploitation of an entire family through the hostage-taking of
its dying parent?
Why can’t APS confirm the abuse it’s supposed to combat
without the cooperation of isolated victims under abusive control at
their very end of life?
Full Article & Source:
New Illinois law protecting elderly from abuse doesn’t go far enough
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