Age Discrimination Commissioner: Australia has a long way to go to end elder abuse
Published:
Topic(s): Age Discrimination
Age Discrimination Commissioner Robert Fitzgerald AM has warned the ongoing cost-of-living crisis is likely to lead to an increased risk of elder abuse with Australia needing to further bolster its efforts to address the nationwide problem.
Elder abuse is when harm is done to an older person by someone they know and trust, often a family member. It can take many forms, including neglect, financial exploitation, physical violence, coercive control, and sexual and psychological abuse.
According to the National Elder Abuse Prevalence Study, one in six older Australians experience elder abuse in a given year, but only one in three victims seek help.
Commissioner Fitzgerald said he was concerned by the latest figures from the National Elder Abuse phone line, which recorded 9,085 calls from July 2023 until the end of May 2024 鈥 a 36% jump from the same period the previous year.
鈥淭his is a significant increase and a timely wakeup call for all of us this World Elder Abuse Awareness Day that we need to be vigilant,鈥 Commissioner Fitzgerald said.
鈥淲hile the national helpline figures don鈥檛 capture calls made directly to individual state and territory helplines, reasons for the increase could be drawn from what we learn from callers at the state level and frontline elder abuse services.
鈥淭his includes a greater awareness of elder abuse, with 15% of older Australians identifying as having been abused, as well as an increased incidence of abuse due to a variety of emerging risk factors. Current economic pressures, including increased housing stress, amid the cost-of-living crisis have the potential to exacerbate the risk of abuse.
鈥淭here is also the growing phenomenon of 鈥榠nheritance impatience鈥, where adult children, frustrated by the longer waits for wealth transfer from parents who are living longer, resort to elder abuse for financial gain.鈥
Commissioner Fitzgerald has welcomed the development of the second iteration of the National Plan to Respond to the Abuse of Older Australians, which is due for release this year, but said Australia 鈥渉as a long way to go鈥 before it can curb elder abuse.
鈥淲ith the largest intergenerational wealth transfer in Australia expected to take place in the coming decades, urgent reform to Enduring Power of Attorney laws is needed to prevent the financial abuse of older persons and make it easier for people to be educated about their rights and responsibilities under these documents,鈥 he said.
Commissioner Fitzgerald also repeated calls for adult safeguarding laws, which give agencies the power to investigate the abuse and neglect of vulnerable adults to be established in every state and territory, similar to those in NSW, SA and ACT.
鈥淭his needs a national safeguarding framework to create consistency across Australia. We also need to do more to tackle the abuse of older persons in First Nations and culturally and linguistically diverse communities. This must start with meaningful engagement with these communities to understand their experiences and concerns,鈥 the Commissioner said.
鈥淓lder abuse is a everyone鈥檚 responsibility. Coordinated efforts across all sectors is critically needed to achieve much-needed reform at the national level and better protect the human rights of all older people to be safe and live free from abuse.鈥
World Elder Abuse Awareness Day is on 15 June. For more information, or to download free elder abuse awareness resources in 20 languages to share with your community, visit our page on elder abuse.
If you experience, witness or suspect elder abuse, you can call the National Elder Abuse phone line: 1800 ELDERHelp (1800 353 374)
ENDS | Media contact: media@humanrights.gov.au or 0457 281 897