{"id":7263,"date":"2025-12-11T05:09:39","date_gmt":"2025-12-11T04:09:39","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/nkvts.dev08.dekodes.no\/english\/report\/a-private-matter-elderly-peoples-perception-of-violence-and-abuse-and-reporting-such-abuse\/"},"modified":"2025-12-11T05:09:39","modified_gmt":"2025-12-11T04:09:39","slug":"a-private-matter-elderly-peoples-perception-of-violence-and-abuse-and-reporting-such-abuse","status":"publish","type":"report","link":"https:\/\/nkvts.dev08.dekodes.no\/english\/report\/a-private-matter-elderly-peoples-perception-of-violence-and-abuse-and-reporting-such-abuse\/","title":{"rendered":"A private matter? Elderly peoples&#8217; perception of violence and abuse and reporting such abuse."},"content":{"rendered":"<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC \"-\/\/W3C\/\/DTD HTML 4.0 Transitional\/\/EN\" \"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/TR\/REC-html40\/loose.dtd\">\n<?xml encoding=\"utf-8\" ?><html><body><p><\/p><p><strong>SUMMARY<\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong>Background<\/strong><br>Violence and abuse against the elderly are among the most hidden and least<br>accessible kinds of violence. Only a minor fragment of this violence is<br>recorded by the police, and in national public victimisation surveys elderly<br>victims are almost non-existent. Surveys targeted more directly at the elderly<br>and clinical experience from work with old people suggest, however,<br>that this group is considerably more exposed to abuse than shown by public<br>figures. It is therefore important to gain more knowledge about possible<br>reasons for this underreporting.<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p><strong>Objectives<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>In this study we have looked at some conditions that may influence elderly<br>people&rsquo;s willingness to report and seek assistance when they are abused:<\/p>\n<p>&bull;&nbsp;Do they deem what they have experienced to be violence, or do they<br>look upon it as behaviour they have to accept?<br>&bull;&nbsp;Do they feel that their right to self-determination has to be renounced<br>for more practical considerations if in conflict?<br>&bull;&nbsp;Are they unaware of elder-abuse, or do they have unrealistic notions<br>about how much and how grave it is?<br>&bull;&nbsp;Do they feel that elder-abuse has to be tolerated, either because of<br>considerations for the abuser or because they think the abused deserves<br>the abuse?<br>&bull;&nbsp;Do they feel the abuse to be a private matter and do not want others to<br>interfere?<\/p>\n<p><strong>Method<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>The study is based on similar studies which have been carried out with<br>different ethnic groups in USA and in several other countries in Asia and<br>Europe, and the answers from the Norwegian respondents are compared<br>with some of the other groups. The Norwegian study was constructed as<br>a postal survey with a sample of 1000 old age pensioners&rsquo; drawn from the<br>membership list of the Norwegian association of old age pensioners, while<br>all the other studies were carried out through personal interviews and with<br>smaller samples of 50 to 100 respondents. In addition to the survey, direct<br>face to face interviews were conducted with 7 respondents in Oslo who also<br>gave supplementary comments. Less than 50% of the Norwegian sample<br>answered the questionnaire, but the moderate response rate does not seem<br>to have disturbed the representativeness of the sample.<\/p>\n<p>The respondents should give their opinion on 20 different statements and say<br>if they completely agreed, disagreed, partly agreed or that they did not know.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Results<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Despite differences in research design and cultural and social differences<br>between the respondents, the different national and ethnic groups did not<br>differ much in their opinions on most of the statements.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Phsyical abuse<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Almost all of the respondents, no matter what cultural or national background<br>they represented, thought that physical violence, like when a spouse<br>hit his partner, was unacceptable. When the abuse consisted of tying<br>mentally or physically impaired old people to the bed or calm them with<br>medication, the attitudes were more mixed. The Norwegian sample was somewhat<br>more tolerant towards these measures of control than most of the<br>other groups, but even among the Norwegians a majority felt that these<br>measures were not acceptable.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Economical abuse<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Next to physical abuse, what raised the strongest opposition was economical<br>abuse, as when children did not repay loans or used their parents&rsquo;<br>money as if it were their own.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Psychological abuse<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>The different groups also showed fairly similar attitudes towards psychological<br>abuse, and in all of the studies a significant majority found it<br>unacceptable for grown children to yell at their old parents.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Neglect<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>The feelings about lack of care were somewhat more conditional. On the<br>one hand a significant majority agreed that when elderly persons could no<br>longer take care of themselves their children ought to do something about it.<br>On the other hand more than three fourths of the respondents agreed at least<br>partly with a statement saying that it was acceptable for children who were<br>caring for their old parents to leave them for a couple of hours now and then.<br>The comments given by the directly interviewed suggest that many respondents<br>find this to be a borderline case and do not look upon it as abuse.<\/p>\n<p>It looks as if most of the respondents have a relatively unanimous opinion<br>about most of the actions described in the different statements as being<br>not acceptable. The one exemption was the question whether or not it was<br>OK for children to temporarily leave old parents in need of nursing. Here<br>the value of taking care of the parents was opposed to the children&rsquo;s need<br>of carrying out other important tasks. This was seen as an ethical dilemma<br>where many found it hard to take a clear stand.<\/p>\n<p>Much of the same goes for the question of whether or not it is permissible<br>for children to force parents to eat if they do not want to. More than half of<br>the Norwegian respondents either meant it depended on the circumstances,<br>or they did not know what to think. The arguments given in the direct interviews<br>suggest that this is seen as a conflict between on the one hand the<br>elderly person&rsquo;s right to self-determination and on the other hand the plight<br>of the children to take care of their parents. It seems that the Norwegian respondents are more inclined than the other groups to take a conditional<br>standpoint on this, or to conclude that the practical considerations should<br>weigh more heavily than the parents&rsquo; right to self-determination.<\/p>\n<p>The Norwegian respondents also had less clear viewpoints than the other<br>groups on the prevalence and graveness of the abuse. This is probably not<br>a result of lack of knowledge; on the contrary research has shown Norwegian<br>elders to be better informed about elder-abuse than elders in many<br>other countries. More probably the different results are, at least partly, a<br>consequence of different research designs. Originally the statements about<br>graveness and prevalence were made to indicate how the respondents subjectively<br>felt about the importance of elder abuse, but they could also be<br>understood as statements about factual numbers and impact on the victims.<br>In a survey like the Norwegian study, where the respondents are filling in<br>an anonymous questionnaire all by them-selves, there is, in contrast with<br>personal interviews with an interviewer present, no possibility to influence<br>the way the questions are interpreted.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Why abuse takes place<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>The respondents were asked to give their opinions on several statements<br>concerning why abuse takes place. Two of the statements suggested the<br>abuse was motivated by characteristics of the abuser, either because he was<br>mentally ill or a close family member. A considerable proportion of the Norwegian<br>sample perceived this as statements concerning the factual importance<br>of mental illness and close family ties as reasons for abusive behaviour,<br>and said they did not know. In this respect the Norwegian respondents<br>differ from several of the other groups who to a greater extent expressed a<br>definite viewpoint, and agreed with both statements.<\/p>\n<p>In two other statements the reasons for the abuse were seen as results of<br>the victim&rsquo;s own behaviour, either because they had done something that<br>made them deserve to be treated badly, or because they themselves had<br>abused their children when young. None of these points of view won much<br>approval from the respondents. Almost no one agreed among the Norwegians<br>or in any of the other groups.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Involvement from outsiders<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>The respondents&rsquo; attitudes towards involvement from outsiders when an<br>elderly person was abused were tested through four different assertions. The<br>first one concerned whether or not an outsider should take action if he knew<br>an elderly person to be abused. The viewpoints on this were rather comparatively<br>evenly divided, half the sample felt he should not interfere, while the<br>other half thought he ought to do something, at least on some occasions.<\/p>\n<p>The next two assertions stated that if a neighbour either suspected or<br>knew that an elderly person was being abused, he should report it to such authorities as social service agencies or the police. The Norwegian sample<br>differed markedly from all the other groups on these themes. A significant<br>majority of the Norwegian respondents, 70 percent, agreed that the neighbour<br>should not report it if he knew an elderly was abused. The Norwegian<br>sample also differed in that a larger majority was opposed to the neighbour<br>reporting when he knew the elderly was abused than if he just suspected it. In<br>all the other groups only a few meant he should not report if he knew while<br>the opinions where somewhat more divided if he just suspected.<\/p>\n<p>The final statement in the study stated that to report the abuse would<br>ruin the life of the abuser. Only a few, less than a fifth of the sample, agreed<br>on this, almost half disagreed, while the rest felt it depended on the circumstances,<br>or they had no opinion. The Norwegian respondents are pretty<br>much in line with the other groups on this.<\/p>\n<p>There seems to be a rather pronounced unwillingness among Norwegian<br>elders to have any involvement from outsiders or public authorities<br>in instances of abuse. There is a considerable consistency in the answers on<br>this, in the sense that almost everyone that was against that people outside<br>the family should interfere was also opposed to the neighbour reporting his<br>suspicions to the authorities, and most of those who where against the neighbour<br>reporting if he suspected abuse also were against him doing so if he<br>knew it for sure. Of all the themes encompassed in the study this is the one<br>giving the most probable explanation of why elderly people are so reluctant<br>about contacting the protective services.<\/p>\n<p>It is hard to see any good reasons why the Norwegian elders are more<br>reluctant than the other groups to involve outsiders and public services. The<br>observed differences may at least partly be dependent on linguistic differences<br>so that reporting (melde fra) in Norwegian has a stronger connotation<br>towards slandering or denouncing than in English. It may also be that the<br>Norwegian concept of &ldquo;sosialomsorgen&rdquo; is felt as more stigmatising than the<br>English &ldquo;Social Service Agencies&rdquo;. The different designs of the studies, with<br>the Norwegian study carried out as a survey, where the respondents answered<br>anonymously, while all the others were conducted as personal interviews,<br>may also have influenced the results. This assumption is supported by the fact<br>that almost all the Norwegian respondents who were interviewed face to face<br>thought it was all right for outsiders to interfere or report the incidents.<\/p>\n<p>The observed differences between the groups could of course also reflect<br>actual differences, and indicate a more privatising attitude towards abuse<br>among Norwegian elders. This may be connected both to cultural qualities<br>of the Norwegian society and because specialised services and agencies dealing with elder abuse is not very much developed in Norway. As we do not<br>know where in Norway the respondents live we cannot tell if those living<br>in areas with elder protective services are more positive than others to have<br>people outside the family involving themselves or reporting the incidents.<br>However, all the face to face interviewed were living in Oslo where elder<br>protective services has been established for some time and are well known<br>among the elder population.<\/p>\n<\/body><\/html>\n","protected":false},"featured_media":0,"template":"","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"file":0,"project":[]},"publication_tag":[],"topic_tax":[5],"class_list":["post-7263","report","type-report","status-publish","hentry","topic_tax-violence-and-abuse"],"acf":[],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/nkvts.dev08.dekodes.no\/english\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/report\/7263","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/nkvts.dev08.dekodes.no\/english\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/report"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/nkvts.dev08.dekodes.no\/english\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/report"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/nkvts.dev08.dekodes.no\/english\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=7263"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"publication_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/nkvts.dev08.dekodes.no\/english\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/publication_tag?post=7263"},{"taxonomy":"topic_tax","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/nkvts.dev08.dekodes.no\/english\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/topic_tax?post=7263"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}