000 03851nab a22002777a 4500
999 _c8753
_d8753
005 20250625151704.0
008 240708s2024 -nz||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
040 _aAFVC
100 _aTurner, Robin M.
_910998
245 _aEffects of changing criteria on improving interRAI assessment for elder abuse :
_banalysis of a national dataset from Aotearoa New Zealand
_cRobin Turner, Paul Glue and Yoram Barak
260 _bBMJ,
_c2024
500 _aBMJ Open, 2024, 14(7): e081791024
520 _aObjectives: Globally, one in six older adults in the community will be a victim of abuse (elder abuse; EA). Despite these horrific statistics, EA remains largely undetected and under-reported. Available screening methods and tools fail to accurately identify the phenomenon's true prevalence. We aimed to test assessment capture rates by altering the criteria for suspicion of EA in the interRAI-HC (International Resident Assessment Instrument-Home Care) in a large national dataset. Design: We employed secondary analyses of existing data to test a methodology to improve the detection of older adults at risk of EA using the interRAI-HC, which currently underestimates the extent of abuse. Setting: The interRAI is a suite of clinical assessment instruments. In Aotearoa New Zealand, interRAI is mandatory in aged residential care and home and community services for older people living in the community. They are designed to show the assessor opportunities for improvement and any risks to the person's health. Outcome measure: Capture rates of individuals at risk of EA when the interRAI Abuse-Clinical Assessment Protocol (A-CAP) is changed to include the unable to determine abuse (UDA) group shown in a pilot study to increase capture rates of individuals at risk of EA. Results: Analysis of 9 years of interRAI-HC data (July 2013-June 2022) was undertaken, encompassing 186 713 individual assessments consisting of 108 992 women (58.4%) and 77 469 men (41.5%). The mean age was 82.1 years (range: 65-109); the majority 161 378 were European New Zealanders (86.4%) and the most common minority ethnicity was Māori (6.1%). Those at high risk of abuse (A-CAP) tended to be male (2402; 51.0%), were 79.2 years old on average (range 65-105), with 49.6% (2335) living alone, 39.4% (1858) suffering from depression and a majority were assessed as not having independent decision making (2942; 62.5%). In comparison, the UDA group showed similar characteristics to the A-CAP group on some measures. They were slightly younger than the general sample, with a mean age 80.1 years (range 65-107), they had higher rates of depression (2123; 33.5%) compared with the general sample (25 936; 14.8%) and a majority were assessed as not having independent decision-making (3855; 60.9%). The UDA group is distinct from the general sample and the UDA group broadly has similar but less extreme characteristics to the A-CAP group. Through altering the criteria for suspicion of EA, capture rates of at-risk individuals could be more than doubled from 2.5% to 5.9%. Conclusions: We propose that via adapting the interRAI-HC criteria to include the UDA category, the identification of older adults at risk of EA could be substantially improved, facilitating enhanced protection of this vulnerable population. (Authors' abstract). Record #8753
650 _aELDER ABUSE
_9220
650 _aHEALTH
_9283
650 _aOLDER PEOPLE
_9414
650 4 _aRISK ASSESSMENT
_9504
650 _aRISK FACTORS
_9505
651 4 _aNEW ZEALAND
_92588
700 _aGlue, Paul
_913098
700 _aBarak, Yoram
_99383
773 0 _tBMJ Open, 2024, 14(7): e081791024
830 _aBMJ Open
_910999
856 _uhttps://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2023-081791
_zDOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2023-081791 (Open access)
942 _2ddc
_cARTICLE
_hnews128