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One in ten adults aged 65 and over experience some form of elder abuse each year in Canada

Every year, hundreds of thousands of older adults from all walks of life suffer from elder abuse. A recent study using data from the Canadian Longitudinal Study on Aging (CLSA) found one in ten adults aged 65 and older experience some form of elder abuse each year in Canada. The research, published online in Nature Aging, was led by Dr. David Burnes, an associate professor at the University of Toronto’s Factor-Inwentash Faculty of Social Work.

The purpose of the study was to examine elder abuse prevalence, as well as to identify risk and protective factors.

Using data from nearly 23, 500 CLSA participants collected over a three-year period, Burnes and his colleagues found:

  • An increase in the estimated prevalence of elder abuse in Canada from 4-8% (found in previous studies) to 10%;
  • Being physically, cognitively and/or emotionally vulnerable increased the risk for elder abuse as does maltreatment in childhood, living with others, identifying as Black and reporting financial need;
  • Social support emerged as a protective factor against elder abuse, in that older adults with higher levels of overall social support in their life had a lower likelihood of being victims;
  • Those who were interviewed by phone reported significantly lower rates of abuse than those who were interviewed in-person, adding to the concern that elder abuse generally goes underreported.

“Our findings may actually underestimate the true population prevalence because older adults tend to underreport personal problems such as family violence,” said Burnes.

One of the key findings from this study was that older adults who experienced higher levels of child maltreatment were more likely to become victims of elder abuse later in life.

“This finding suggests interpersonal/family violence should be examined and understood as a life-course issue, rather than organized according to discrete life-stage domains of childhood maltreatment, intimate partner/domestic violence and elder abuse separately,” Burnes said.

By using a large, representative dataset from the CLSA to measure elder abuse in Canada, the authors of the study were able to mitigate shortcomings of past studies, such as small sample size, cross-sectional design and convenience samples.

“We have now accumulated enough consistent, strong evidence in the field to support elder abuse as a highly prevalent issue in Canada requiring further urgent attention,” Burnes said.

Read more: Silent suffering: the plague of elder abuse in Nature Aging

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