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October 13, 2008

Elder Abuse: Whole Lot of Issues But No Help for Victims (Jamaica)

Elderly under siege - Assault cases include rape, stabbings, beatings
published: Sunday October 12, 2008

Gareth Manning, Staff Reporter

THEY SHOULD be among the most respected in our society, but a high number of the nation's seniors - 65 years and over - are turning up at public hospitals with severe injuries inflicted by other people.

The assaults range from stab and gunshot wounds to rape. But blunt injuries, which are often caused from beating or hitting a person with a dull instrument, is the most frequent form of assault that causes seniors to seek emergency care in the island's accident and emergency (A&E) units.

Last year alone, a total of 441 seniors were forced to access A&Es after being beaten with blunt instruments. Another 195 sought care due to intentional lacerations, which are wounds caused by sharp instruments but are less severe than stabs. Seventy were shot, 53 stabbed and 23 sexually assaulted or raped.

But, while data on reported cases exist, not much work has been done in analysing the reasons behind the injuries of the elderly.

"We don't have any clue who the perpetrators are. Somebody could have beaten up somebody, or they could have just been the victim, but we have no idea about that," acknowledges chairman of the Violence Prevention Alliance, Dr Elizabeth Ward. Ward, who is a former director of disease prevention and control in the Ministry of Health, was also integral in the development of the Jamaica Injury Surveillance System which is currently used to monitor and collate data on injuries coming through public hospitals.

What are the issues?

"While we are looking at the data and getting alarmed, what we need to be saying is: Where is the on going operational research to find out exactly what are the issues? Where are they located, and are there any key intervention areas where we can make a difference?" says Ward.

Paulette Burke, a coordinator at the Women's Outreach Centre in St Andrew, sees a number of these battered elders daily. In fact, she says of the little more than 80 registered as part of its senior citizens' club, about 30 per cent of them often show up with complaints and bruises.

From her experience, most abuses are meted out by relatives, often children of the elderly.

She relates some recent cases dealt with by the centre.

"There was this former teacher whose son told him that he can't stay in the house and the son thumped him in his jaw. And right now, as you look at it, you can see that something is wrong with it," she says. Burke discloses that the elderly man has tried to put his son out of the house before, but without success.

Rescued by neighbour

She tells another tale of a 78- year-old woman who had to be rescued by a neighbour from her abusive son in a nearby inner-city community.

On a visit to enquire about the woman's whereabouts, neighbours told her of a history of severe beatings.

"The lady is a very thin-bodied person and the neighbour told me that him beat her up. The neighbour had to intervene because the mother had messed up herself and the neighbour decided to clean her up," Burke tells The Sunday Gleaner.

She is convinced that many cases of elder abuse are underreported because most seniors have nowhere to go once they make a report.

Abridged
SOURCE: Jamaica Gleaner
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Any Charges Reported on this blog are Merely Accusations and the Defendants are Presumed Innocent Unless and Until Proven Guilty.

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