Medical and Social Factors Associated with Referral for Elder Abuse Services in a National Healthcare System.

2021 
BACKGROUND Elder abuse (EA) is common and has devastating health consequences yet is not systematically assessed or documented in most health systems, limiting efforts to target healthcare-based interventions. Our objective was to examine sociodemographic and medical characteristics associated with documented referrals for EA assessment or services in a national US healthcare system. METHODS We conducted a national case-control study in US Veterans Health Administration facilities of primary care (PC)-engaged Veterans age ≥60 years who were evaluated by social work (SW) for EA-related concerns between 2010-18. Cases were matched 1:5 to controls with a PC visit within 60 days of the matched case SW encounter. We examined the association of patient sociodemographic and health factors with receipt of EA services in unadjusted and adjusted models. RESULTS Of 5,567,664 Veterans meeting eligibility criteria during the study period, 15,752 (0.3%) received services for EA (cases). Cases were mean age 74, and 54% unmarried. In adjusted logistic regression models (aOR; 95%CI), age ≥85 (3.56 v. age 60-64; 3.24-3.91), female sex (1.96; 1.76-2.21), child as next-of-kin (1.70 v. spouse; 1.57-1.85), lower neighborhood socioeconomic status (1.18 per higher quartile; 1.15-1.21), dementia diagnosis (3.01; 2.77-3.28) and receiving a VA pension (1.34; 1.23-1.46) were associated with receiving EA services. CONCLUSION In the largest cohort of patients receiving EA-related healthcare services studied to date, this study identified novel factors associated with clinical suspicion of EA that can be used to inform improvements in healthcare-based EA surveillance and detection.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    0
    References
    0
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []