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The shifting conceptualization of elder abuse in the United States: from social services, to criminal justice, and beyond

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 August 2015

Shelly L. Jackson*
Affiliation:
Institute of Law, Psychiatry and Public Policy, PO Box 800660, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA Email: slj4u@virginia.edu
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Extract

A variety of forces have shifted the conceptualization of elder abuse over time to where it is almost unrecognizable when compared to its original conceptualization. The field has adopted or embraced whatever social problem is in vogue in an attempt to elevate elder abuse to a recognizable social problem that to date has eluded the field. This paper traces the various influences on the shifting conceptualizations of elder abuse and how those conceptualizations have shaped society's response. The paper concludes by suggesting that multiple conceptualizations can and must co-exist, a framework which is consistent with the multidisciplinary team approach becoming prevalent in the field.

Type
Guest Editorial
Copyright
Copyright © International Psychogeriatric Association 2015 

A variety of forces have shifted the conceptualization of elder abuse over time to where it is almost unrecognizable when compared to its original conceptualization. The field has adopted or embraced whatever social problem is in vogue in an attempt to elevate elder abuse to a recognizable social problem that to date has eluded the field. This paper traces the various influences on the shifting conceptualizations of elder abuse and how those conceptualizations have shaped society's response. The paper concludes by suggesting that multiple conceptualizations can and must co-exist, a framework which is consistent with the multidisciplinary team approach becoming prevalent in the field.

1950s: conceptualizing older adults in need of protection

The rise of protective services

More than two decades prior to the identification of elder abuse, protective services for vulnerable older adults was instituted. The development of protective services was facilitated by the enactment of the Social Security Act of 1935 which changed the face of the elderly population by the 1950s by drastically reducing the number of older Americans that were financially and/or residentially dependent upon their family (Kutza, Reference Kutza and Caputo2005). For example, the percentage of elderly widows living alone rose from 18% in 1940 to 62% in 1990, while the percentage living with adult children declined from 59% to 20% (McGarry and Schoeni, Reference McGarry and Schoeni2000). Consequently, there was a tremendous increase in the number of older adults living alone. At the same time, Americans were living longer. In the 1930s, the average life expectancy for males and females was 58.1 and 61.6 years, respectively. By 1950, life expectancy had increased to 65.6 and 71.7 years for males and females, respectively (CDC, 2011). This longer life expectancy contributed to an increase in the elderly population. Between 1950 and 1970, the elderly population increased from 8.1% to 9.8% (Hobbs, Reference Hobbs1996).

America of the 1950s experienced tremendous prosperity (Chevan, Reference Chevan1989). This allowed the juxtaposition of the poor and the affluent, exposing the wanting among poor and vulnerable older adults. The increased visibility of issues germane to older Americans alerted public welfare officials to a large number of elderly citizens who were experiencing functional limitations while living on their own (Wolf, Reference Wolf, Bonnie and Wallace2003). This realization motivated professionals to find remedies for the problems faced by vulnerable older adults.

Concern about the increasing numbers of very old, impaired, and impoverished elderly individuals – a condition later termed self-neglect – led to the formulation of new government programs referred to as protective services units in the 1950s (Brownell and Abelman, Reference Brownell and Abelman1998; Wolf, Reference Wolf, Bonnie and Wallace2003), fortuitously at a time when society was relatively prosperous and willing to fund such projects (Estes, Reference Estes1982). Amendments to the Social Security Act in 1962 authorized payments to states to establish protective service units (Teaster et al., Reference Teaster, Wangmo and Anetzberger2010). The first protective services legislation contained in the Older American's Act of 1965 provided federal funding to states to support community planning, social services, and research and development projects for individuals aged 60 years and older, but particularly targeted those with the greatest social and economic need (O'Shaughnessy, Reference O'Shaughnessy2008). These units focused on identifying and meeting the day-to-day needs of vulnerable older adults, and in some cases initiating legal proceedings such as guardianship.

Initially, interest in protective services flourished. In 1966, Congress funded six demonstration projects to evaluate the utility of the protective services units established in several states, which constituted the first (and last) empirical examination of the effectiveness of protective services. Unexpectedly, the study revealed that older adults receiving these services had higher nursing home placements and higher mortality rates than older adults receiving traditional services (Blenkner et al., Reference Blenkner, Bloom and Nielson1971). This is not surprising in hindsight as protective services vigorously promoted intervention in the form of institutionalization as a solution to the destitution and isolation of their elderly clients (Wolf, Reference Wolf, Bonnie and Wallace2003).

Thus, the conceptualization of the problem – that impoverished and vulnerable older adults were in need of protection – resulted in a policy solution designed to address impoverishment and functional limitations: institutionalization (and where appropriate, guardianship). Institutionalization was perceived as the best alternative for ensuring adequate food, shelter, and functional assistance for these individuals. Importantly, then, protective services as it was initially conceptualized was not designed to address elder abuse, but rather, self-neglect.

Over time, protective services became disparaged. Criticisms included the costliness of these programs, the research demonstrating that such intervention could be counterproductive and deleterious to the welfare of elderly citizens, stigma associated with public assistance, and importantly, the perception that such interventions infringed on the civil rights of elderly Americans (Wolf et al., Reference Wolf, Hodge and Roberts1998). As a consequence, interest in the use of protective services waned, along with an accompanying decrease in funding for such programs.

1970s: conceptualizing elder abuse as caregiver stress

The “discovery” of elder abuse, and the transition of protective services to adult protective services, occurred within the context of the discovery of child abuse. Therefore, the discovery of child abuse is briefly reviewed.

Child abuse

Prior to the recognition of elder abuse, child abuse had been gaining attention and in important ways was a precursor to the “discovery” of elder abuse. Child abuse was “discovered” in 1962 with the publication of Kempe's Battered Child Syndrome (Kempe et al., Reference Kempe, Silverman, Steele, Droegemueller and Silver1962). With the power and authority of physicians raising the profile of child abuse (along with other important factors), society rallied around the recognition of child abuse (Parton, Reference Parton1979). While initially conceptualized as stemming from parental psychopathology (Kempe et al., Reference Kempe, Silverman, Steele, Droegemueller and Silver1962; Spinetta and Rigler, Reference Spinetta and Rigler1972), child abuse (predominately child physical abuse at the time) was quickly radically re-conceptualized as an issue associated with parental stress (Gelles, Reference Gelles1973), and then more comprehensively refined into an ecological model which placed parental culpability in a larger societal context (Belsky, Reference Belsky1993). For example, prominent at the time was the belief that every parent was vulnerable to abusing their children under the right circumstances (Friedrich and Boriskin, Reference Friedrich and Boriskin1976). Child abuse was conceptualized as resulting from the stresses of parenting. Therefore, what families needed was assistance in managing the challenges associated with child rearing. Given this conceptualization of child abuse, the policy solution was the provision of social services for families experiencing stress due to lack of money, housing, nutrition, parenting skills, etc. Regardless of the source of stress, the focus of intervention was on the parents. The approach was less on culpability and more on helping. Importantly, in the beginning at least, the problem of child abuse was primarily situated in the parent–child relationship and only in the 1980s did child sexual abuse emerge and considerably expand the range of individuals who could abuse children, thus requiring a different conceptualization of the problem.

With the recognition of child abuse, federal and state governments were compelled to act (Hafemeister, Reference Hafemeister2010). By 1963, the Children's Bureau had promulgated a model child abuse reporting law that mandated that physicians report suspected physically abused children to law enforcement agencies. By 1967, every state had adopted a mandatory child abuse reporting statute. Through a confluence of events, including media attention (Parton, Reference Parton1979), child abuse had become a legitimate social problem, reflected in the passage of the Child Abuse Prevention and Treatment Act (CAPTA) of 1974.

Elder abuse

The timing of CAPTA was impeccable. Recall that up to this point, attention toward older adults had been focused on self-neglect. However, in the wake of the discovery of child abuse, recognition of elder abuse emerged. Physicians are credited with first identifying elder abuse. Although elder abuse has been recognized throughout history (Gorbien and Eisenstein, Reference Gorbien and Eisenstein2005; Teaster et al., Reference Teaster, Wangmo and Anetzberger2010), Burston is generally identified as writing the first published account of elder abuse in a scientific journal—the British Medical Journal—which appeared in a 1975 letter entitled “Granny Battering.” However, Robert Butler wrote the first account of elder abuse in the USA in Why Survive?: Being Old in America (Butler, Reference Butler1975).

Early research on elder abuse took place primarily in the field of gerontology. With the very recent recognition of elder abuse, the field was still primarily focused on vulnerable and impoverished older adults. Studying this population, Steinmetz (Reference Steinmetz1978) observed that some older adults were being abused by their caregivers. She concluded that, similar to child abuse, elder abuse (primarily physical abuse at the time) stemmed from the stress of caring for vulnerable (functionally impaired) older adults. (Note also that similar to child abuse, the abusive situation was limited to a victim and a caregiver). Steinmetz's (Reference Steinmetz1978) research catapulted elder abuse into the public sphere. Caregiver stress theory, as it was labeled, dominated the field for the next two decades.

In the context of their waning popularity, advocates for protective services – a system historically designed to promote the well-being of functionally impaired and impoverished elderly persons – took advantage of these reports and research to call for expanding the use of protective services to respond to the needs of elder abuse victims. Harbison and Morrow (Reference Harbison and Morrow1998) note that when elder abuse emerged in the 1970s, powerful interest groups, such as service providers, had a motive for depicting older adults as frail and dependent (p. 697). Providers reasoned that the structure and mechanisms of protective services were already in place, as well as an acceptable explanatory model (i.e. caregiver stress). Therefore, the protective services model was retained and adopted without much consideration as to its appropriateness in responding to elder abuse.

This conceptualization of elder abuse as a problem of caregiving, similar to that of child abuse, resonated with Congress and the media. In 1975, Congress amended the Social Security Act to include Title XX, which required states to enact protective services for abused or neglected elders (Teaster et al., Reference Teaster, Wangmo and Anetzberger2010) and in 1987 Congress amended the Older Americans Act (Title I) to address the protection of older adults from abuse, neglect, and exploitation (Greenlee, Reference Greenlee2011). As child abuse already had a conceptual framework that was similar to that of elder abuse, state policy makers simply crafted elder abuse protective services statutes after child protective services statutes (Glick, Reference Glick2005; Hafemeister, Reference Hafemeister2010), in some states literally restating the problem from “adults in need of protective services” to “victims of elder abuse, neglect, and exploitation” (Kohn, Reference Kohn2009). Thus, during the 1980s protective services units became adult protective services units as they are widely known today (for statutory reviews, see Jirik and Sanders, Reference Jirik and Sanders2014; Jackson, Reference Jackson2015). In addition, due to the perceived success of child abuse mandatory reporting laws (Hafemeister, Reference Hafemeister2010), and in anticipation of federal funding, states began passing elder abuse mandatory reporting laws crafted after child abuse mandatory reporting laws (Kohn, Reference Kohn2009), a policy that remains controversial to this day (Glick, Reference Glick2005).

Evidence that the caregiver stress model had permeated the public consciousness is reflected in a 1981 federal report stating that “[M]ost experts do appear to believe . . . that a major precipitating factor [of elder abuse] is family stress” (Garfield, Reference Garfield1991). Given this conceptualization (caregiver stress), the policy solution was the provision of social services for caregivers to reduce their stress (e.g. respite care for caregivers). However, there was no federal elder abuse legislation or a widely-held recognition that elder abuse was a serious social problem.

The 1990s: conceptualizing elder abuse as a crime

The conceptualization of elder abuse changed radically in the 1990s. The historical underpinnings of this shift resulted from the substantial gains made by the battered women's movement, and subsequently, the recognition of family violence, at the time two distinct concepts. Domestic violence as it was initially conceptualized in the 1970s was vastly different than the conceptualization of elder abuse in the 1970s and consequently the two fields shared little in common. That would change radically in the coming decades.

Battered women's movement

Gaining public attention during the 1970s was the battered women's movement, an offshoot of the women's movement. However, its initial influence on elder abuse is more circumspect than that of child abuse.

Following on the heels of the discovery of child abuse was the rise of the battered women's movement and the discovery of domestic violence. England is credited with first recognizing battered women with the publication of Scream Quietly or the Neighbors will Hear in 1974 (Pizzey, Reference Pizzey1974). The signal was quickly transmitted to America where battered women's shelters had existed informally in communities across the country, but without public attention or organization (Miccio, Reference Miccio2005; Lehrner and Allen, Reference Lehrner and Allen2009). In America, the 1970s witnessed the rise of soon-to-become powerful grassroots advocacy groups (Schechter, Reference Schechter1982). Populated by a mix of battered and professional women (e.g. lawyers), the battered women's movement conceptualized domestic violence as a problem of structural gender inequality (patriarchy) in society (Dobash and Dobash, Reference Dobash and Dobash1979). The problem was not with the victims of domestic violence, but with a society and its laws that permitted and promoted the abuse of women. The response, therefore, required vast macro-level changes (laws, institutions), denigrating and eschewing any micro-level conceptualization of domestic violence.

Among the many factors believed to contribute to patriarchy was law enforcement's lack of response in domestic violence calls (Miccio, Reference Miccio2005), an institution believed to be in collusion with other political structures that permitted the abuse of women. Indeed, law enforcement at that time was being trained to “mediate” domestic disputes rather than to actively intervene (Miccio, Reference Miccio2005). Lawsuits were initiated across the country, including the prominent Thurman v. City of Torrington, Conn., compelling changes in law enforcement policies (Zorza, Reference Zorza1992). Simultaneously, research demonstrating the benefits of arrest had been published (Sherman and Berk, Reference Sherman and Berk1984), bolstering the advocate's position, although discounting subsequent research that might have tampered enthusiasm for arrest policies (Sherman, Reference Sherman1992). Although the Movement's demands were much broader than changes in the criminal justice system, the Movement and a criminal justice system response became conflated, with batterer accountability a hallmark of the Movement (Gondolf, Reference Gondolf2011).

Advocates were tenacious in their demands. Twenty years of unabridged passion and advocacy culminated in the passage of the Violence against Women Act (VAWA) of 1994, validating domestic violence as a social problem. Importantly, the VAWA was embedded in the Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act of 1994, the implication being that the federal government conceptualized domestic violence as a crime. The battered women's movement was now perceived as wildly influential and successful (Miccio, Reference Miccio2005; Buzawa et al., Reference Buzawa, Buzawa and Stark2012). However, the Movement stalwartly avoided mandatory reporting as a policy solution as such policies were perceived as dangerous for women and overtly paternalistic (Han, Reference Han2003; Hafemeister, Reference Hafemeister2011).

Family violence

Simultaneously competing for attention in this arena was the family violence model espoused by sociologists such as Straus and Gelles (Reference Straus and Gelles1986). These scholars were vilified by the battered women's movement for promoting a narrative in which domestic violence could best be understood as a form of family violence – difficulty resolving conflicts – rather than resulting from patriarchy. Perhaps even more egregious according the battered women's movement, Straus and Gelles (Reference Straus and Gelles1986) argued that both males and females perpetrated violence against their spouses/partners, sometimes referred to as gender symmetry. In addition, Gelles (Reference Gelles1985) observed that offenders were often afflicted with various forms of psychopathology, distasteful to the battered women's movement who perceived such characterizations as excuses.

The battered women's movement had made tremendous headway in terms of demanding a law enforcement response such that by the 1990s arrest of offenders was widely (albeit unevenly) practiced (Sherman, Reference Sherman1992; Miccio, Reference Miccio2005) regardless of how advocates or scholars conceptualized the problem. These two predominant views of domestic violence have had a rancorous co-existence, but coalesced to a large extent around a criminal justice response. While still somewhat contentious, today there is greater recognition of the heterogeneity subsumed under the rubric of domestic violence (Kelly and Johnson, Reference Kelly and Johnson2008).

Elder abuse transitions to a criminal justice framework

Prior to the 1990s, elder abuse generally had not been considered a crime (Krienert et al., Reference Krienert, Walsh and Turner2009). An important philosophical shift in the conceptualization of elder abuse occurred in the 1990s, underpinnings that were present a decade earlier. Groundbreaking research by Georgia Anetzberger (Reference Anetzberger1987) and Karl Pillemer (Reference Pillemer1985) began to challenge the largely-held assumptions underlying the caregiver stress model. This research revealed that elder abuse differed in meaningful ways from child abuse, shifting the focus from the victim's role in elder abuse (i.e. their vulnerability and difficulty in caring for them) to that of the abuser (psychopathology model), transforming the conceptualization of elder abuse from a problem similar to child abuse to a problem more closely aligned with family violence (Wolf et al., Reference Wolf, Hodge and Roberts1998). As the family violence model already had a criminal justice framework, the inclusion of elder abuse as a family violence issue transformed elder abuse from a social services issue to a criminal justice issue (Wolf et al., Reference Wolf, Hodge and Roberts1998).

The impact of this early research in reshaping the field of elder abuse cannot be understated, although a confluence of events facilitated the adoption of this new perspective. The criminal justice shift was nested in a greater societal upheaval at the time, with the late 1980s and early 1990s bearing witness to soaring crime rates (BJS, 2002) and an accompanying “get tough on crime” response (Mauer, Reference Mauer1999). This transition was further facilitated by the public's shifting stereotype of the elderly from vulnerable to relatively well-off by the late 1980s (Hooyman and Kiyak, Reference Hooyman and Kiyak1988; Harbison and Morrow, Reference Harbison and Morrow1998). Harbison (Reference Harbison2000) describes the tension between viewing older adults as frail and dependent on the one hand and the emerging research finding older adults “successfully” aging, with some younger adults voicing resentment at having to pay for programs for older adults who are relatively well-off and physically fit (p. 64). Thus, older Americans who were victims of abuse were not “in need of assistance” but rather were entitled to justice.

This criminal justice conceptualization was cemented with the launching of the elder justice movement. In 2002, the US Department of Justice became involved in elder abuse through the Department's Nursing Home Initiative, which began funneling funds to the National Institute of Justice for elder abuse research (Connolly, Reference Connolly2012a). The phrase elder abuse was supplanted by elder justice, reflecting the Department's conceptualization of elder abuse as a crime. The new terminology had the very practical effect of expanding the concept and explicitly wrapping elder abuse in a criminal justice sheath perceived to resonate with a constituency that is broader than a social services orientation engenders. Scholars argue that this criminal justice transformation is responsible for elder abuse receiving legitimacy in the 1990s that affiliation with public welfare or social services failed to provide (Wolf et al., Reference Wolf, Hodge and Roberts1998; Krienert et al., Reference Krienert, Walsh and Turner2009). First introduced in 2002, the Elder Justice Act was passed in 2010. However, elder abuse still has not reached the prominence of a recognized social problem.

2010s: the expanding conceptualizations of elder abuse

The field may have stagnated except for the infusion of new funds to the elder justice research field administered by the National Institute of Justice. Now that funding sources were available, disciplines other than social services expressed an interest in elder abuse (Anetzberger, Reference Anetzberger2011). This had the effect of imbuing the field with fresh, new perspectives across a number of disciplines, each with its own conceptualization of elder abuse. Geriatricians such as Mark Lachs had been advocating for conceptualizing elder abuse as a public health issue since the 1990s (Lachs, Reference Lachs1996), while Laura Mosqeda emphasizes the medical implications of elder abuse (Gibbs and Mosqeda, Reference Gibbs and Mosqueda2014), and XinQi Dong conceptualizes elder abuse as a human rights issue (Dong et al., Reference Dong, Chen and Simon2014). Legal scholars have attempted to frame elder abuse as a human (Herring, Reference Herring, Doron and Soden2012; Westwood, Reference Westwood2012) or civil (Kohn, Reference Kohn2009; Connolly, Reference Connolly2012b) rights issue. Some activists have conceptualized elder abuse as a gendered issue (Somers, Reference Somers2013). Scholars have continued to conceptualize elder abuse as a crime (Payne, Reference Payne2011), a form of family violence (Acierno et al., Reference Acierno2010), and a social services issue (Wangmo et al., Reference Wangmo2014). Although some scholars have abandoned the caregiver stress model (Rathbone-McCuan, Reference Rathbone-McCuan2000), APS caseworkers continue to embrace this conceptualization (Mixson, Reference Mixson2010). Clearly, each conceptualization has implications for the way in which society responds.

And so sits elder abuse in 2015, 40 years after its discovery, at the crossroads between a historical reliance on social services and a newer and more politically savvy criminal justice orientation, each of which was borrowed from other fields. In addition, there is now an ever-expanding collection of conceptualizations. It is time for these siloed conceptualizations to cease competing with one another for prominence (depicted in Figure 1) and allow for their simultaneous existence (depicted in Figure 2). Recognition of the diversity and range of complexity of elder abuse cases supports the assertion that forms of elder abuse are sometimes a crime, sometimes a medical issue, sometimes a social services issue, and sometimes a combination of these and more. Consequently, a one-size-fits-all response is unacceptable (Jackson, Reference Jackson2014). Adult protective services remain primarily responsible for responding to elder abuse, but they are no longer alone. As disciplines recognize the multidimensional nature of elder abuse (Payne, Reference Payne2002), there is greater interest in responding with a multidisciplinary team approach (Daly and Jogerst, 2014; Schneider et al., Reference Schneider, Mosqueda, Falk and Huba2010). Our conceptualization of elder abuse should reflect this shift.

Figure 1. Conceptualizations of elder abuse over time.

Figure 2. Co-existing conceptualizations of elder abuse.

Conflict of interest

None.

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Figure 1. Conceptualizations of elder abuse over time.

Figure 1

Figure 2. Co-existing conceptualizations of elder abuse.