
Identify Abuse

What is elder abuse?
As defined by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, elder abuse “is an intentional act or failure to act that causes or creates a risk of harm to an older adult. An older adult is someone age 60 or older. The abuse often occurs at the hands of a caregiver or a person the elder trusts.”
The Elder Justice Act defines elder abuse as the knowing infliction of physical or psychological harm or the knowing deprivation of goods or services that are necessary to meet essential needs or to avoid physical or psychological harm. “Elder” means an individual age 60 or older.
All states have some form of elder abuse prevention laws. Laws and definitions of elder abuse vary by state. State statutes are accessible through this link.
What are the types of elder abuse?
Elder mistreatment typically takes one of the following forms: physical abuse, psychological or emotional abuse, sexual abuse, financial abuse, and neglect. Older adults may also experience maltreatment in the form of self-neglect and/or abandonment. The types of abuse are defined below.
Note: Definitions of maltreatment align with federal statutes, when applicable. Where statutory authority is unavailable, definitions derive from research in the field of elder abuse.

Physical Abuse:
- Hitting, beating, pushing, shaking, slapping, kicking, pinching, and burning
- Unlawful, excessive, or unnecessary use of force like restraints or force-feeding
- Over-medication or under-medication

Sexual Abuse:
- Unwanted touching, sexual assault or battery, sexual harassment
- Sexual interaction with elders who lack the capacity to give consent

Emotional / Psychological Abuse:
- Verbal assaults, insults, threats, intimidation, humiliation, isolation, and harassment

Financial:
- Misusing or stealing an older person’s money or possessions
- Coercing or deceiving an older person into signing any document such as a contract or will
- Improper use of conservatorship, guardianship, or power of attorney
*Fraud and scams are characterized by acts perpetrated by a stranger or someone outside of a trust relationship. Deceit or misrepresentation are used to convince another to relinquish their money, property, or assets.

Neglect:
- Failing to provide for life necessities such as food, water, clothing, shelter, and medicine

Abandonment:
A few state statutes classify abandonment as a separate and unique form of elder abuse. Definitions vary by state. Some state statutes categorize elder abandonment as a type of elder neglect. Abandonment may occur at a hospital, nursing home, or other public place.

Self-Neglect:
- Obtaining adequate food, water, clothing, shelter, personal hygiene, medical and mental health care, and safety precautions, and/or managing one’s finances.
- Self-neglect excludes a situation in which a mentally competent older person, who understands the consequences of their decisions, makes a conscious and voluntary decision to engage in acts that threaten their health or safety as a matter of personal choice.