When your parents or loved ones age out
of caring for themselves, you choose assisted living facilities for them.
Typically, you are able to trust the nurses and staff in their care, and before
hiring them, have done your due diligence to ensure that you can do so.
However, not every caregiver is as they appear, and some caregivers in nursing
homes and even in-home care are going to take advantage - or downright abuse -
the situation at hand.
Understand the signs and symptoms of
nursing home and hospice care in Cleburne neglect and abuse so
that you can immediately help your elderly loved ones when they need your help.
Elder abuse is defined as physical, emotional, or sexual harm inflicted upon an
older adult, as financial exploitation, or neglect of their welfare by those
who are directly responsible for their care. Physical abuse is non-accidental
use of pain to result in injury or cause pain, and emotional abuse may include
ignoring an elder, isolating them from friends or activities, yelling or
threats, humiliation, and ridicule.
If you notice your loved one isn’t being
taken care of properly, isn’t eating or taking their medications, or going to
therapies, you may be looking at signs of nursing home neglect. Primarily elder neglect
means the caregiver has failed to fulfill an obligation, and when it is
intentional, it becomes abuse. There may be unexplained weight loss, unsuitable
clothing for the weather, inadequate living conditions, being left unbathed,
untreated physical conditions, or desertion at a public place. Look for
out-of-character behavior from the elder as well as threatening, belittling, or
controlling caregiver behavior. One top sign is behavior from the elder that
mimics dementia, such as rocking, sucking, or mumbling to themselves.
Financial exploitation is another type of
elder abuse that isn’t talked about. Caregivers financially abusing seniors may
steal checks or make significant withdrawals from their accounts. These
financial changes may also reflect suspicious changes in wills, powers of
attorney, wills, and other titles, and other activity that children or siblings
may feel the account holder has not made. Unfortunately, elders are also prime
targets for scams from individuals that are not caregivers at all.
If you suspect that your elderly loved
one may be a victim of elder abuse, report it immediately. Even if it is not
abuse or neglect, it is simply not worth going unnoticed. Hundreds of thousands
of cases of elder abuse happen every year, and every single one matters.