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Nursing Home Abuse & Neglect

Failing To Diagnose Elder Abuse At Emergency Room

Call: (312) 609-0400

Male medical worker yelling at senior man

While research has shown that one out of every ten elderly people suffers from abuse, only one case out of every 7,700 emergency room visits by elderly people results in a diagnosis of elder abuse, pointing to the fact that many cases are not being diagnosed and reported. More than 23 million older adults visit hospital emergency departments each year, making them important settings in which abuse could be recognized and reported. A recent study by researchers at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill demonstrates that instances of elder abuse are drastically underreported by emergency room personnel. A Chicago nursing home abuse attorney helps families to understand what signs to look for so that they may report suspected abuse.

Problems Identifying Elder Abuse

The researchers believe that several issues lead to doctors failing to identify and report nursing home and elder abuse when older people seek care in emergency departments. Doctors and other medical staff may have a difficult time determining whether or not an elderly person's bruises are the result of falling or of physical abuse. They may also be uncertain whether hygiene issues indicate a lack of care by a provider or an issue with the elderly person's own self-care. Older people have medical needs that are often quite complex, and determining the underlying causes is more challenging than doing so for younger patients. Medical staff have duties of care to report suspected abuse, because they are mandated reporters under the law. When they breach their duties, elderly patients may suffer further harm.

Improving Awareness of Elder Abuse

In order to address the issue of failures to diagnose elder abuse during ER visits, doctors and medical staff should be trained to spot the signs of abuse and neglect of elderly patients. They should also be trained to report potential abuse even if the doctors and staff are not completely certain that is what has happened. Elderly people often do not self-report abuse that is happening to them. Sometimes they are afraid to do so. In other cases, they may simply be unable to report ongoing abuse. A Chicago nursing home abuse attorney believes that such training for hospital staff is important.

Call: (312) 609-0400

About the Author
about-kevin-t-yen

As a partner with the firm since 2002, Kevin Yen manages the personal injury department and leads all investigations into nursing home neglect and abuse cases. Kevin has dedicated his life to personal injury matters and has represented thousands of clients and their families to recover damages for their losses. His clients have included family members who lost a loved one due to a tragic accident, injured children, construction workers injured while on the job site and a host of others.