Laws protecting the elderly from abuse are similar to and related to laws protecting dependent adults from abuse.
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Laws protecting the elderly from abuse are similar to and related to laws protecting dependent adults from abuse.
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Many forms of elder abuse are recognized as types of domestic violence or family violence since they are committed by family members.
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Key to prevention and intervention of elder abuse is the ability to recognize the warning signs of its occurrence.
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Signs of elder abuse differ depending on the type of abuse the victim is suffering.
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Elder abuse can destroy an elderly person's quality of life in the forms of:.
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Risk of death for elder abuse victims are three times higher than for non-victims.
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Children and living relatives who have a history of substance Elder abuse or have had other life troubles are of particular concern.
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Elder abuse perpetrated by individuals with mental illnesses can be decreased by lessening the level of dependency that persons with serious mental illness have on family members.
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Perpetrators of elder abuse can include anyone in a position of trust, control or authority over the individual.
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In some situations the Elder abuse is "domestic violence grown old, " a situation in which the abusive behavior of a spouse or partner continues into old age.
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Such corporate Elder abuse might escape notice both because they have more aptitude at methods of Elder abuse that can go undetected and because they are protected by attorneys and the government in ways that individuals are not.
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Some Elder abuse is the willful act of cruelty inflicted by a single individual upon an older person.
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Sometimes this type of Elder abuse is referred to as "poor practice, " although this term reflects the motive of the perpetrator rather than the impact upon the older person.
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Elder abuse is not a direct parallel to child maltreatment, as perpetrators of elder abuse do not have the same legal protection of rights as parents of children do.
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